Still Cartagena

Rhiann Marie - Round the World
Stewart Graham
Mon 1 Mar 2010 19:24
Still Cartagena
 
We are now ready to leave Cartagena for the San Blas Islands. Ready, in the sense that we have to move on however it would be very easy to stay longer. We had hoped to anchor overnight at Islas Rosarios or Islas San Bernardos, however we are delayed today waiting for a Fed Ex delivery and Immigration to clear us out of the country. In Cartagena when you arrive by yacht you can not clear in and out yourself and you need to hire an agent to do the work for you. We have a German guy doing our clearance. Cartagena is also famous for the very high standard of medical treatments and people come here to get all kinds of specialist treatments and operations done. I think our German agent came here to get a charisma bypass. It seems to have worked extremely well. 
 
It has been really interesting here and like all places in the world we visit there is always something to learn from how they run their country. We learned from the Maurice the Columbian guy we met the other day that the reason Cartagena has no traffic problem is that they regulate which cars can use the roads on which days, but basically you can only use your car six days per week and there also days when no mopeds or motorcyles can be used. While it is a fact that the traffic in Cartagena is excellent I am not convinced about the policy as our friend told us that they had to keep three cars so that one of them always had a valid licence plate for each particular day!
 
Last night we went out with two different Australian couples, Phil and Christina from Songline and Al and Deb from Sunboy, who also know John and Helen on Nika who are now far ahead of us. Its a small world. We have noted that we have had most contact to date with Australian cruisers, who are travelling of course in the same direction as us but generally just as far as Oz. The Americans we have met normally seem to be just cruising the Caribbean. I dont think we have met any who are circumnavigating and it seems most of the British going round are on the Blue Water Rally or the World Arc. 
 
It is a fact however that we are meeting many genuinely interesting and friendly people and of course everyone has their own story to tell which never ceases to interest me.  
 
Tonight I think we will cook aboard and we will not have steak in order to let the supply and demand curve re - balance after our efforts over the past week! However we couldn't resist one final purchase of beef for the freezer best fillet steaks were about £6.50 per kg. So lucky for those joining us in the Pacific if there is any left by the time we get there.
 
Travelling like this means communications have to be multichannel, using whatever is the best connection at any particular time. This ranges from mobile phone, text, e-mail by satellite connection, satellite phone, office e-mail address using wifi on lap tops, yahoo e-mail at internet cafes with business e-mails forwarded to that address - it is mind boggling and very easy to overlook things. I think therefor I will have to have a rethink  about communications and try to rationalise what we are doing and though answers may take a little longer to get from me - it may be a more managable arrangement. So if there is anyone out there who is missing an answer from me it maybe that I have overlooked or not even received your message. It is certainly the case that I do not get voice messages on my mobile phone so anyone leaving a message like that is wasting their time and money.
 
The other thing that is difficult to manage is cash. Obviously you dont want to carry too much on person or on board. However accessing machines that will take your card is not always straightforward and there are daily limits imposed by card providers, individual machines, specific currencies etc. Here in Columbia we have been taking out 3 - 400,000 (£100 - £130) Pesos regularly. This off course alarmed our bank (who we had informed anyway about our travel plans) so they decided to stop our card on our working account and also withdraw the account information from the internet. This led to a wee bit of a stushie late Saturday afternoon in  jewelers shop where Trish had dragged me into ("just for a look" - I should have known). Columbia is very famous for Emeralds and this is her birth stone ........... you know the rest.
 
For visiting the Kuna Indians in San Blas Islands we are bringing loads of alchohol, cigarettes, Hello magazines, Hollywood action movies and the common cold to trade with them.
 
Just joking!
 
We have dictionaries, learning books, pens and other writing things. We also have large stocks of rice and cooking oil, plain soaps, baby shampoo, clothes, and for some reason lots of little bits and pieces for little girls to put in their hair and fishing stuff for the men and boys. Mind you they'll have to trade pretty hard we're not a charity ..............................
 
Our plan is initially to sail to Punta Escocia in Kuna territory ,Panama, to see if we fare any better than the 2800 Scots who sailed there in 1698. This was Scotlands first attempt to start following the lead of England and Spain and the other Europeans who established overseas colonies. The mission was led by William Paterson, the founder of the Bank of England and of the 2800 people involved 2000 died. Bloody bankers!   
 
See you in San Blas.