There was a break in the weather after the first pair of
Hurricanes blew through. We arrived at Bahia de Los Angeles
just ahead of the second, Marty and Olaf. We'd heard reports
that they might veer east, avoiding us with the brut force of a
direct hit. It rained off and on for the first two days and
nights, but there were still highlights of sun to look forward
to and we collected for dinners under the community palapa at
Geckos. The camp was full and we all hit it off socially from
the first.
Mars Chasing Moon
The moon was approaching full and after dinners we would wander
back to our individual camps, position sand chairs between
squalls and sit watching across the Sea of Cortez and the
islands nestled just off shore. Moon rose a while after dark, a
little later each night, followed at a distance by Mars. There
were millions of stars in the late night sky, but Mars chasing
moon were dominant. With this event, the closest approach of
Mars to Earth in our lifetimes, we could feel the magnificence
of the moment, the grandeur of our universe and the relative
smallness, the almost insignificance of our selves.
Over the next few days, weather improved and we were drawn into
the wonderful
October weather we had grown to expect. Fishing continued with
boats returning
from the islands to our beach, each with a story to tell.
Several groups of kayakers arrived, one departed to the islands
for a 5-day
stay. Others were up early and off for the south end. The first
week there were
reportedly 8 whale sharks lounging on the surface. We joined
them in our tin
boat. The kayaks were certainly more conducive to the
environment of the sharks
as they noiselessly paddled back and forth. Several people
jumped into the water
and swam with the huge but usually tranquil beasts. They do seem
to want human
attentions.
Moon Chasing Mars
Somewhere in the middle of our trip Mars passed the moon, if
only from our perspective. I sat at night watching the skyward
activities and wondering what minuscule influences this stellar
event had on us humans. How did these events influence the
tides here on Earth from so many distant miles? What else did
they influence? Menstrual cycles, moods? What more?
From my sand chair at night I found peace. The quiet water, a
campfire down the shore, quiet conversations in which I was and
wasn't involved and all the while my two giants of the sky
whispering to me subtly that I was only the smallest part of the
big picture, implying that I had no worry about charge of
anything. I could destroy my planet, just explode it and the
universe would continue unaffected and unaware. Somehow that
was a great relief to me, to not be in charge, to have no
influence over outcomes, to act with no reaction necessary.
A Blow
We whiled away the days, exploring the shore, boating, fishing
and sharing the
beaches of the bay. Afternoons usually brought an increasing
breeze, welcomed on
arrival as relief from the heat. One particular near-evening
the breeze grew
quickly into a strong wind from the north, soon stronger still,
until everyone
was out of the water. Beached boats were hauled farther ashore
and we huddled in
small groups wondering if we were in for a blow. Questions
about hurricanes
Marty and Olaf were reiterated.
Several boats were anchored or moored in the small cove in
front of the camp.
One of the ladies pointed out that the largest boat seemed to
be drifting
southward, not as though it were loose, but more slowly. A
number of us on the
beach watched the boat for a time. It appeared to be dragging
anchor.
Within the next hour the boat was a few yards from hitting the
rocks. The wind
was whistling, blowing sand across our faces and the boat
toward the beach.
Someone had to do something. News circulated through the gusts
that the boat may
have been secured with both a mooring and an anchor and that
the mooring line
may have broken. The guys swung into action.
There was apparently no way to repair the broken mooring, so
they decided that a
heavier and backup anchor was in order. But getting the anchor
into the boat,
out to sea and properly positioned during what seemed to us to
be a growing
tormenta was the challenge. And the wind speed was still
rising, driving the
ground swells into the beach with a great force.
A tin boat was snatched from its sandy perch, well above the
waterline and
dragged near the water, the new anchor loaded and we pushed the
boat stern first
into the roiling sea. Three guys climbed aboard while the rest
of us shoved the
boat out from shore and tried to turn the bow into the weather
and the deeper
sea. Holding the bow, lighter than the stern and more easily
influenced proved
an almost impossible challenge for the men. We were struggling
to hold our
footing on the rocks forming the shore there, and fighting the
wind and sea with
little control over either the boat or the elements. For a
while we knew we were
going to loose both the tin boat and the boat slipping anchor.
At one point, we had maneuvered the boat far enough from shore
to drop the
outboard. An attempt was made to start the motor but the boat
was so out of
control it was difficult to find, let alone pull, the start
cord. The men in the
boat were being thrown violently against the sides, the motor,
the seats. The
men in the water we at risk of being run over by the boat,
crushed between the
stones and the keel, the motor.
Finally the man in the stern had enough depth and a moment of
relative
tranquility to grab and pull the start cord. No Response. The
bucking began
again and he lost the cord, found it, issued a mighty heave
several times and
the motor fired. Those of us outside the boat tried to
stabilize her enough for
the driver to clear the beach. We could here the engine change
pitch as the
pilot engaged the transmission and the boat lunged out into the
safer waters of
the cove. The dramatic actions of the waves held the boat at
bay and the prop
struck rocks several times before the men reached deeper
waters.
The men made several passes at the larger boat, still dragging
anchor in the
sand and within a few feet of disaster. There was little room
to maneuver, to
align the smaller boat in position where one of the men could
board the other.
After an eternity of several attempts, failure, renewed
attempt, we could see
one of the men, then a second had boarded. The smaller boat
roared back for
shore. It had taken on so much water during its launch and
offloading efforts it
was in danger of sinking. The pilot drove the boat onto the
shore and we pulled
it up the beach, shouting directions to pull the bung and drain
the boat
quickly, to bail out as fast as we could. We had to get the
smaller boat back in
the water. The plan was emerging slowly due to communications
limited by the
wind, the sea and the stress of the situation.
Once again the men on the beach slid the boat into the sea.
Lighter this launching due to the offloading of the two other
men, the event was under better control and the small craft
soon bobbed back toward the larger, threatened craft. The
pilot of the smaller boat received a bow line from the drifter,
apparently secured it to the stern of the smaller boat and
began to pull. Those of us standing on the beach could hear
the dramatic surge of the engine, laboring under stress to pull
the larger boat forward, away from the rocks as the waves
crashed and the wind howled. We saw no forward movement.
There was little we could do, standing there, pulling in
spirit, hoping beyond hope to get the tandem crafts back into
deeper water and out of harms way. After five minutes of no
movement, adjustment of lines and motor, readjustment and
whining outboard stressed to its limits, the boats began to
move, just an almost unnoticeable inch, then two, three, then a
foot, a yard. It took the men half an hour to move the boats
two hundred yards to a safe place, with enough clearance for
the larger craft, to drop the new anchor and secure its line to
the bow.
Soon the sailors were beached, safe after a great ordeal. There
was so much
adrenaline surging through the men on the beach that they
carried and pushed the
boat all the way up to the safe tideline in the sand. The event
was over. A
seemingly unsolvable problem had emerged triumphant thanks to a
major team effort.
We wound slowly down over the next several hours, tired from
our efforts, some
more than others, but knowing in our hearts we had all pulled
together and
accomplished what had to be done and what none of us could have
done alone.
Late that night Mary Ann was sleeping and I was trying and
unable. The events of the early evening were still spinning in
me and our remaining time on this beach was now countable in
hours rather than days or weeks. We had made so many new
friends and rekindled older relationships. Knowing I would not
sleep until I had written enough of these events down to form a
memory, I slipped on a pair of shorts, grabbed a flashlight and
my notebook and, of course, a slug of rum. I searched for a
place to write into the night that would not disturb Mary Ann
or others, found the hood of my Vaca Blanca Suburban to be of
acceptable height, and began to write. In pausing from time to
time, to reflect over the events of the day, I found my eyes
drifting upward, to the west. The Moon was still almost full
and still chasing Mars. But in this final leg, Mars had won
the race. A black silhouette formed the finish line, a short
distance away but still outside my grasp. A jagged line dark
blue above and deep black below stood between Moon and the
now-invisible Mars. Mars had set behind the western mountains.