Pacific Jade is tied up between two cement pillars at Marina Nuevo Vallarta her bilge sporting a void where her transmission normally rests. Her prop shaft and bent propeller blade have been repaired at the haulout yard where she spent two days propped unceremoniously over a sea of cement. We decided that the transmission work could be done from the marina rather than on the hard saving us $77.00 USD per day. It costs a lot of money to keep her high and dry in Puerto Vallarta and she doesn't like it up there anyway.
While we wait for the transmission to be repaired we might as well check out the little town of Yelapa. It is possible to anchor there but it's iffy and 70 feet deep in the best spot. We'll have more fun if we're not worrying about the boat and the challenging surf landings.
An early morning bus ride takes us to the small bay of Boca that shelters a pod of pangas. Many of these ferry tourists and residents to some of the tiny villages accessible only by water perched along the southern edge of Banderas Bay.Our panga is peopled by 20 or so passengers and hurries up the coast stopping once to unload a couple of locals at Las Animas.
Deftly, the panga driver lands in the surf at Yelapa and we are helped off the skiff onto a coarse sand beach. Like many bays on this coast the surf has sculpted a crescent of blonde sand amid the jungle clad bluff that rises on both sides.
The village of Yelapa rises into the hillside to our right and a lovely complex of thatch roofed rooms with mosquito netted beds and mosaic tiled bathrooms lies nestled along the left shoreline. Between them is a small palapa dotted beach with a tiny cleft in the sand through which the pangas can usually traverse to the lagoon that lies on the other side.
The sea rhythmically pushes a stream of water through the breach in the sand carving a brackish river that is constantly resculpted by the surf.
At times it heals over completely leaving an unmarred strip of beach until the panga drivers take to the shovels to free their boats from the landlocked lagoon.
Today we remove our shoes, lift our hems and wade through the knee deep rapids, the coarse sand shifting beneath our feet.
Once we're on the other side of the beach a labyrinthine set of eneven stairs leads to a cobbled walkway. This walkway or road is the main access to Yelapa and it has been built wide enough for two horses or donkeys pulling carts to pass comfortably. The cobbles periodically give way to dirt or cement as we walk uphill then down then up again. Set into the hillside the tiny village overlooks the beach and the Bay of Banderas beyond it. We feel as though we've stepped through a stargate into an enchanted past.
The restaurant we're looking for is closed due to family issues so we are directed to another.
Directions from a local hombre take us up the roadway a short distance then up 3 stairs to the left past a doorway and under a clothesline where an assortment of underwear hangs listlessly. A few steps along the adjacent walkway brings us to a narrow passageway between two buildings just wide enough for our passage. At times our shoulders can touch both walls at the same time. The passageway leads to yet another cobbled road and the busy restaurant called Pollo Rollo. We secured a table for six and were joined by two couples we had met along the way within the last hour.
Thank goodness we have our new friends with us because they were smart enough to bring a flashlight with them and the night is as black as the inside of Jonah's whale. The bobbing beam of the flashlight leads the way home.
Home for the next two nights is a loft above a palapa with no electricity and no water. Earlier in the day, Callum, who we'd met on the panga ride had introduced us to his landlady who he thought might have a place for us to stay. We said we didn't need much except a place to lay our heads. At the bottom of a sturdy wooden ladder she had handed us a candle, lighter and a flashlight and with a smile and a nod, motioned us up the ladder. Our room is bordered on three sides with thatch and a sheet hung on the ladder side lends privacy from below. The floor is constructed of rough cut 2 X 12's covered with grass mats. A small table sits in the corner and 2 surprisingly comfortable beds with clean sheets and fuzzy blankets fill most of the room.
Giddy with a sense of adventure and the 2 margaritas that accompanied our supper we ascend our ladder.The thatch, although tightly woven and in good repair, is unable to keep the sound of the surf, just steps away, from penetrating our haven. We wake to the sound of the powerful surf rushing against the shore then pulling the sand out to sea and the early morning call of one rooster to another. Grinning at the primitive situation we find ourselves in we scramble out of bed and ready ourselves for the days exploration.
Our intent is to visit the closest and smallest waterfall reportedly only a 5 minute walk. 40 minutes later we realize we must have turned in the wrong direction. The cobbled road has given way to dirt, little puffs of dust swirl around our ankles at each step as the road leads down along the river bank. Horses led by youngsters and donkeys pulling laden carts pass at irregular intervals. The river's edge is dotted with mexican families spending the day together, smoke from their wood fires drifts and loops toward us.
After a refreshing drink at a small restaurant beside the river we retrace our steps toward town. The day is getting hotter and we trudge back the way we came as the heat presses against us.
Through town to the church then turn left as we've been instructed by a helpful local.
Uphill and alongside a chattering stream we walk. The stream clatters and chuckles over and around boulders worn smooth by years of runoff. During the rainy summer season the creek swells to fill the streambed but today it's little more than a happy stream skipping downward to join the sea.
In a surprisingly short time - since we're going the right way now - we can hear the shower of water against rock and round the corner to a verdant oasis. The waterfall cascades over the rock face, splashing and tumbling over mossy abuttments as it makes it's way downward filling a green pool with crystal water. Ferns and foliage cling to the rocky wall shiny and wet with the fine cool mist that hangs in the air.
A few tables and chairs sit upon a manmade concrete floor in what passes for a restaurant. Our hot bodies almost sizzle as we dip into the chilly pool that instantly refreshes us. We clamber out of the pool shivering with the delicious cool and somehow choke down every drop of what is possibly the worst and definitely the most expensive margarita we've ever had before we head home.
After supper at a lovely restaurant on the beach, Joe and I stroll home in the darkness barefoot and without our flashlight....again.
Out of the darkness a young French man is suddenly beside us. It takes a moment to pull ourselves from our thoughts and grasp his whispered message. Not 5 feet in front of us a smooth hump is just visible. A mama turtle scooping flippers full of sand to form a birthing place for her young. We'd almost tripped over her as our thoughts replayed the events of the day.
Wow! The cherry on top of a fabulous day. And we thought it couldn't get any better.
Tomorrow we make the trip back to the cacophony of traffic and people in a hurry to be somewhere else.
While we wait for the transmission to be repaired we might as well check out the little town of Yelapa. It is possible to anchor there but it's iffy and 70 feet deep in the best spot. We'll have more fun if we're not worrying about the boat and the challenging surf landings.
An early morning bus ride takes us to the small bay of Boca that shelters a pod of pangas. Many of these ferry tourists and residents to some of the tiny villages accessible only by water perched along the southern edge of Banderas Bay.Our panga is peopled by 20 or so passengers and hurries up the coast stopping once to unload a couple of locals at Las Animas.
Deftly, the panga driver lands in the surf at Yelapa and we are helped off the skiff onto a coarse sand beach. Like many bays on this coast the surf has sculpted a crescent of blonde sand amid the jungle clad bluff that rises on both sides.
The village of Yelapa rises into the hillside to our right and a lovely complex of thatch roofed rooms with mosquito netted beds and mosaic tiled bathrooms lies nestled along the left shoreline. Between them is a small palapa dotted beach with a tiny cleft in the sand through which the pangas can usually traverse to the lagoon that lies on the other side.
The sea rhythmically pushes a stream of water through the breach in the sand carving a brackish river that is constantly resculpted by the surf.
At times it heals over completely leaving an unmarred strip of beach until the panga drivers take to the shovels to free their boats from the landlocked lagoon.
Today we remove our shoes, lift our hems and wade through the knee deep rapids, the coarse sand shifting beneath our feet.
Once we're on the other side of the beach a labyrinthine set of eneven stairs leads to a cobbled walkway. This walkway or road is the main access to Yelapa and it has been built wide enough for two horses or donkeys pulling carts to pass comfortably. The cobbles periodically give way to dirt or cement as we walk uphill then down then up again. Set into the hillside the tiny village overlooks the beach and the Bay of Banderas beyond it. We feel as though we've stepped through a stargate into an enchanted past.
The restaurant we're looking for is closed due to family issues so we are directed to another.
Directions from a local hombre take us up the roadway a short distance then up 3 stairs to the left past a doorway and under a clothesline where an assortment of underwear hangs listlessly. A few steps along the adjacent walkway brings us to a narrow passageway between two buildings just wide enough for our passage. At times our shoulders can touch both walls at the same time. The passageway leads to yet another cobbled road and the busy restaurant called Pollo Rollo. We secured a table for six and were joined by two couples we had met along the way within the last hour.
Thank goodness we have our new friends with us because they were smart enough to bring a flashlight with them and the night is as black as the inside of Jonah's whale. The bobbing beam of the flashlight leads the way home.
Home for the next two nights is a loft above a palapa with no electricity and no water. Earlier in the day, Callum, who we'd met on the panga ride had introduced us to his landlady who he thought might have a place for us to stay. We said we didn't need much except a place to lay our heads. At the bottom of a sturdy wooden ladder she had handed us a candle, lighter and a flashlight and with a smile and a nod, motioned us up the ladder. Our room is bordered on three sides with thatch and a sheet hung on the ladder side lends privacy from below. The floor is constructed of rough cut 2 X 12's covered with grass mats. A small table sits in the corner and 2 surprisingly comfortable beds with clean sheets and fuzzy blankets fill most of the room.
Giddy with a sense of adventure and the 2 margaritas that accompanied our supper we ascend our ladder.The thatch, although tightly woven and in good repair, is unable to keep the sound of the surf, just steps away, from penetrating our haven. We wake to the sound of the powerful surf rushing against the shore then pulling the sand out to sea and the early morning call of one rooster to another. Grinning at the primitive situation we find ourselves in we scramble out of bed and ready ourselves for the days exploration.
Our intent is to visit the closest and smallest waterfall reportedly only a 5 minute walk. 40 minutes later we realize we must have turned in the wrong direction. The cobbled road has given way to dirt, little puffs of dust swirl around our ankles at each step as the road leads down along the river bank. Horses led by youngsters and donkeys pulling laden carts pass at irregular intervals. The river's edge is dotted with mexican families spending the day together, smoke from their wood fires drifts and loops toward us.
After a refreshing drink at a small restaurant beside the river we retrace our steps toward town. The day is getting hotter and we trudge back the way we came as the heat presses against us.
Through town to the church then turn left as we've been instructed by a helpful local.
Uphill and alongside a chattering stream we walk. The stream clatters and chuckles over and around boulders worn smooth by years of runoff. During the rainy summer season the creek swells to fill the streambed but today it's little more than a happy stream skipping downward to join the sea.
In a surprisingly short time - since we're going the right way now - we can hear the shower of water against rock and round the corner to a verdant oasis. The waterfall cascades over the rock face, splashing and tumbling over mossy abuttments as it makes it's way downward filling a green pool with crystal water. Ferns and foliage cling to the rocky wall shiny and wet with the fine cool mist that hangs in the air.
A few tables and chairs sit upon a manmade concrete floor in what passes for a restaurant. Our hot bodies almost sizzle as we dip into the chilly pool that instantly refreshes us. We clamber out of the pool shivering with the delicious cool and somehow choke down every drop of what is possibly the worst and definitely the most expensive margarita we've ever had before we head home.
After supper at a lovely restaurant on the beach, Joe and I stroll home in the darkness barefoot and without our flashlight....again.
Out of the darkness a young French man is suddenly beside us. It takes a moment to pull ourselves from our thoughts and grasp his whispered message. Not 5 feet in front of us a smooth hump is just visible. A mama turtle scooping flippers full of sand to form a birthing place for her young. We'd almost tripped over her as our thoughts replayed the events of the day.
Wow! The cherry on top of a fabulous day. And we thought it couldn't get any better.
Tomorrow we make the trip back to the cacophony of traffic and people in a hurry to be somewhere else.

