Friday, October 05, 2007

Sailing Colombia to Panama via San Blas


October 5th - 9th We sailed from Cartagena, Colombia to Porvenir, Panama on the Stahlratte - a 100 ft sailing ship built in the early 1900's. We spent 4 days en route in the San Blas Island paradise. The San Blas archipelago are an autonomous region of Panama owned and governed by the Kuna people of Panama. So far they have resisted commercial tourism on the 350+ islands so there is very little tourist infrastructure making this area authentic and paradisaical. It`s 11 in the morning...October 5th and we are on board the Stahlratte, captained by none other than Captain Ludwig...one jovial fellow for sure! On board with us are the Hondogs, Felix and his BMW and about 15 other passengers. Today we leave for Panama via the San Blas Islands on the historic ship, the Stahlratte. Build in 1903 in Holland as a fishing vessel this ship is now owned by an association that leases and rents the boats out to pay for it maintenance costs.
Our cast-off is delayed somewhat by a visit from the Colombian Coast Guard...first a search of the ship that takes about 2 hrs after which one search crew leaves and returns with what we assume is a `drug sniffing mutt` (black lab). Some 2 hrs later we get the OK to leave but not before we have to sign a document that says that the coast guard completed the search without hassling people, treated us well, then we need to give finger prints!
For the next 24 hrs we sailed across the Caribbean Sea..the big blue! This ship is fantastic compared to the 41 foot sailboat we came over in...private rooms...and it sails so smooth that no one is sea-sick! Late afternoon finds us cruising into the San Blas islands under a gorgeous sunset and Captain Ludwig has us anchored in a idyllic spot...within swimming distance of three gorgeous coconut tree covered islands with white sand beaches! Man...this is heaven.
The next two days are spent eating, (we had cooking and clean up duties one day so got to spend time in the kitchen...oh boy!), drinking, swimming, swinging on ropes, exploring islands, having a great barbeque, reading, snorkeling and chilling with a fantastic group of people on the ship. Lori and I only spent the first night in our room and the next three nights out on the deck under a fantastic Caribbean sky...one of the few times we have seen the milky way in the tropics. The San Blas Island area has the second most number of lightning strikes of any place on earth and I can believe it...every night was a fantastic show of lightning..but no rain! Our time in the San Blas came to an end way too quickly...but the next portion of our trip begins when we hit shore in Panama. HOWEVER..to do this we must unload the motos into Kuna canoes...a somewhat nerve-racking operation as these are carved wood canoes, long in length but narrow in width. We may be nervous but the Kuna Indians figure no big problem and along with our three bikes toss in a full load of paying Kuna Indians! Once we hit the shore we continued up a narrow river for about 2km (here even the Kuna got a little nervous as the heavily laden canoe was barely able to make progress against the current ) after which we ended up unloading the motos in the river. Here we said goodbye to the friends we made on the Stahlratte (however we have continued to see some of them up to a month after leaving them on the banks of the Rio Carti) and started on the rough dirt track through the Cordillera San Blas (mountains) to the tarmac Darien Gap road which will lead us back to Panama City!



Stahlratte in the San Blas (constructed in Holland in 1903 as a fishing boat, the "Steel Rat" is a historic sailing vessel owned by a consortium of German folks that own the boat and rent it out to pay for upkeep and maintenance costs)

the Stahlratte gang

Kuna village in the San Blas Islands


off loading Lori's bike into a canoe on the Panama end......


3 motos in a Kuna canoe

We get boarded by the coast guard and the sniff dog before we leave Colombia - with cocaine selling for less than $5.00 a gram here, I wonder why?



relaxing on the boat


Kuna woman selling her molas


maybe we should stay....