As the crow flies it's only about 2 miles north from El Mezteño to the anchorage at El Cardonal. For us, however, it was about 5-1/4 miles offshore and back in, because we needed to run the engine to recharge our batteries. Sailing is like that sometimes. And so it was on January 12, 2017.
El Cardonal is a very large, deeply-indented bay that has room for several boats, but is shallow for quite a ways off the beach at its head [as shown in the photo]. It seems that most cruisers opt for next-door Caleta Partida instead. Having anchored in both places, we could not understand why; the holding was excellent in El Cardonal at our anchoring depth of 27.3', and there was just as much to do on shore as in Caleta Partida. Perhaps it was because El Cardonal's winter water was full of organic material from the mangroves along the beach and inland? Was it us? Whatever the reason, we noticed during the four days we anchored in El Cardonal that most boats came and left after just one night. Or less.
The following days and nights, winds rose from the SW gusting into the high teens/low 20s, as forecast. We had a short and scenic hike onshore (40 minutes one-way) across the isthmus of the island to its east side cliffs, past some very healthy mangroves and other fine specimens of desert flora. Back aboard, the wind suddenly gusted from flat-calm to SE mid-teens and stayed there for a rolly and bumpy night as the wind-driven fetch entered the bay. El Cardonal's excellent holding made everything tolerable. This breeze dropped after sunrise but later clocked further westward, which afforded a bit more shelter under El Cardonal's north cliff face. And then? The wind continued the same SW-to-W pattern all over again, through January 15, 2017. This can grow tiresome. And did.
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