Friday, December 18, 2015

Crossing the Mona Passage to Puerto Rico

We have been told many times that the crossing to Puerto Rico is a tough one.  We agree!  After waiting in Samana for several days for optimal weather conditions, we had a two day window, which is short.  However, the weather forecasted was NOT what we experienced.  This is a 150 mile passage with unpredictable currents everywhere, deep, rough shoals and thunderstorms, often severe from Puerto Rico during the night.  We departed Samana on Tuesday, December 15, 2015 at 8:15 am with moderate winds and seas.  The wind and the waves started to pick up about 11:00 am and we had 20 knots of sustained winds with higher gusts and 6 foot seas and higher for the next 24 hours.  We were not able to sail as these winds and waves were directly on our nose the entire time.  During this time, our stern rail broke, the set screw on the tubing holding the wind generator was moving around and caused the stern rail to break.  Chuck took some dock lines and tied everything together to avoid any more loss or damage.  Our engine stopped twice due to dirt in the fuel, so Chuck had to change the fuel filter both times, bleed the engine, and re-fuel from jerry cans while we were rocking and rolling.  As we neared the Puerto Rico coastline, the conditions improved with less wind and smaller seas about six hours before we made the anchorage.  We traveled with two other buddy boats, China Rose and Ever After, and called each other on the radio every hour for a status check.  We made our anchorage in Boqueron, Puerto Rico on Wednesday at 5:15 pm after 152 nautical miles and 33 hours.  There are no pictures, but I did make an attempt to take a video of one of our buddy boats to show how rough it is crossing the Mona Passage. 



                                

2 comments:

  1. Hi Chuck and Linda. Wow, what a rough passage. Glad you made it and are still living the dream. I'm back in Michigan after being on the boat for 16 month. Take care,
    Bill Bailey, Cavalier

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Bill, glad to hear from you. Hope your cruising life is not over yet. We would love to meet up with you in the Caribbean. Next stops will be USVI and BVI. Hurry on down to sun and sand!

      Delete

We do not post spam - all messages are moderated before posting.