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Biggest Fish While Sailing to Santa Marta

As soon as the sun rose on August 29, 2015, we left Cabo de la Vela. It is about 150 nautical miles to sail to Santa Marta!

Local fishermen were already at sea. Leaving the anchorage, I was at the front of the boat to avoid catching the plastic bottles the local fishermen use for their fish trap floats. Those traps may be their only source for feeding their families and paying for their children’s education. We have not had much luck catching fish in the Caribbean for last 8 months so we almost gave up. Thinking back,

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Sailing from Curacao to Cabo de la Vela in Colombia

Day 1 (August 25, 2015): Rather in rush, we left Curacao at about 10 AM. The wind ranged from 15 to 20 knots throughout the day. Days earlier, there was a hurricane ‘Danny’ (later changed to tropical storm) in Atlantic which affected the trades weakening them and giving us a great weather window for Colombia. We took it! We heard this sailing route is one of the five most difficult sailing routes! During my watch schedule, I saw hundreds of dolphins playing around our boat following the waves. They stayed with us for more than an hour.
Night 1 (August 25,

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‘No Sushi’ Signs in Curacao

When we first arrived in Curacao, we saw ‘Dushi’ (Sweet) signs everywhere. Staying here longer, we are seeing ‘Sushi’ signs more often. ‘Sushi’ means ‘Trash’ in Papiamento, the local language in Curacao.

Curacao is the country I have stayed the longest in so far other than my birth country (South Korea) and my adopted country (USA). During the last three months, we have met lots of cruisers and local people in Curacao. “Thursday Night Cruiser’s Dinner” at ‘The Pier’ Restaurant was a great social event. Grocery shopping, hiking, snorkeling, and playing ‘Mexican Train Domino’ games with other cruisers,

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Klein Curacao and a Three AM Food Run

We made a day sail to Klein Curacao which is 15 miles away to the East when our friend Charlie visited us for a week.

The sail was nice with a 15 knot breeze and a 4 to 6 foot sea. We arrived in Klein Curacao and dropped anchor in less than 10 feet of water in deep white sand away from a beautiful beach. We went to shore and did a quick walkabout the island.

The next day we got up early and John and Charlie tried to kitesurf. The wind wasn’t very good, and they came back within a couple of hours.

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‘Kindle’, New Friend!

Curacao allows US citizens to stay up to six months for each visit. By applying for residency (a Declaration of Admission by Law), US citizens can work in Curacao as the Dutch do. We have been staying here for almost three months. I have multiple travel guide books and maps on Curacao. Been there and done that! My mind is already on our next stop which will be Santa Marta in Colombia. In the meantime, reading has been my main hobby here in Curacao.

There is a bookshelf (outside) by the dinghy dock at the anchorage. Some cruisers leave books on the shelf and others take them.

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Bon Bini Dushi Curacao

‘Bon Bini’ means ‘Welcome’ and ‘Dushi’ means ‘Sweet’ in Papiamentu, the official language in Curacao, “originated from different African languages, complemented with words from Dutch, Spanish, English, and Portuguese.”

Sailboat for us seems like a water RV. The other day, John and I figured out that we sailed less than 10% of our total time since leaving North Carolina in November 2014. Sailing lets us go from one place to another place. Once we get there, we anchor, live on a boat, and travel the country. This is the remaining 90%. We are more nomadic travelers than sailors.

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Small, Slow, and Simple Life

I can say that sailors live small, slow, and simple. Sunrise means action sunset means relaxation.
In Spanish Water Bay in Curacao where we are anchored, we are surrounded by four German boats, one Argentinian boat, one Norwegian boat, one Swedish boat, one Brazilian/Argentinian boat, one Australian boat, and one American boat. In the distance, there are several French boats. We are all from different parts of the world.

We keep things SMALL on the boat because we don’t have much space. We go slowly because we use wind to go somewhere. We have neither cable TV,

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Curacao, Oil Refining and Tourism!

‘The problem is not the problem. The problem is your attitude about the problem.’ (Captain Jack Sparrow in the Movie ‘Pirates of Caribbean’)… from a poster hanging in the Customs Office in Curacao!It’s time for a bus ride to the (1) Customs office, (2) Immigration Office, and (3) Harbor Master Office in Willemstad (Capital of Curacao)! Not having a local currency ‘Guilder’ (ANG: ANtilliaanse Gulden or NAFl: Netherlands Antilles Florin), we paid bus fare in US dollars ($1/person or 1.70 ANG). Both US dollars and local currency ANGs are accepted here.

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Klein Curacao and Floating ‘Bad Bunny’

Klein (Small) Curacao is an island about 4 hours (about 25 nautical miles) sailing distance from Bonaire. We decided to stay a night in Klein Curacao. When we got there, there was a huge Coast Guard ship from Aruba/Curacao. We anchored in 10 feet of water over a nice sandy bottom. Klein Curacao is an underwater mountain and within 100 feet of shore, the water drops off to 500 feet or more. We went to shore and were told that the coast guard ship comes to this island often for drug interdiction and human smuggling as it is close to Venezuela and Colombia.

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Bonaire, SCUBA Diving Mecca

After visiting Florida and Korea for six weeks, I am back to the boat. Meeting friends and families was sweet but saying ‘Good Byes’ to them was bitterly hard, especially to my mom. While I was away, John took care of all the boat problems (for now). Also, our friend Charlie visited John for kite-boarding for a week. My cat “Sesame’s Wound” is completely healed.Some asked me where Bonaire is. It is just north of Venezuela and east of Colombia in South America. Bonaire is a Mecca for SCUBA diving, snorkeling, windsurfing, and kite-boarding. Just from the beach, I fed fish by holding a piece of bread in a hand.

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