Monthly Archives: May 2024

Road trip to America: California Part II

It’s family time!  I love visiting California as I get to see my beautiful sister, family, and friends!  A trip to America is not a trip without stopping in Southern California.  And she was showing off its beauty with gorgeous sunny days and clear skies. But it was chilly coming in at 12-14 C!  We also had some amazing sunsets.

This is the Hermosa Beach pier and boardwalk or strand.

Cameron was home from Colorado University and he had a collegiate volleyball tournament where they made it to the Gold bracket but ended up losing to the team who won the entire tournament!   It was a nail biting, yet truly exciting weekend!

I was blessed to be able to visit with several friends during my stay.  This is my good friend Deborah.  She used to work with Matt many, many moons ago and now I’ve stolen her from him.

My dear friend Ed whom I’ve know for over 30 years!   The top right photo is a statue near the Manhattan Beach pier and the lower photo is a view from my sister’s house toward Hermosa beach.

Squeezed in a few more friends.  Paul (aka Wild Man) is top center), Troy and Paul (top left), Deborah and I, middle, Gian Marco, Jennifer, and Mateo (bottom photos).

Kimberly managed to get sick, then shared it with me so we ended up spending almost 9 days inside recovering.  The day before I left we made it out for a little sister time.

I even had a chance to visit with my family even though I was not feeling great.  Easter Sunday service then brunch at the Cheesecake Factory with my aunt Diana, uncle Mark and uncle Matthew.

And breakfast with my uncle Joe and my dad’s wife Kelly.

Kimberly and I enjoying some Gelato before I left.  It was such a disappointment to be so sick for so long, but at least I got to be home with my sister.

Our blog posts run 10-12 weeks behind actual live events.  This blog post occurred during mid-March to mid-April 2024.  Did you catch Part I of Road trip to America: Texas?

Jamie, Christine, Michelle

Road Trip to America: Texas

It’s that time of year again where I make my way to America.  As we get further and further west it becomes a little more challenging to get back to the states.

Matt and I were in Whangaroa enjoying the beautiful bays when we realized we had to head back so I could catch my flights.  We sailed about 6 hours to Bay of Islands where I caught a city bus to Whangarei (3 hours).

Whangarei

While in Whangarei, I visited with my friend Kara and her friend Emma.  I was able to get a quick mani / pedi and my hair done by my favorite stylist Jordyn.  I would really love to go back to my dark brown hair, but without access to a hair stylist I just can’t deal with the grays!  Yes, this is a HUGE luxury for me.  Normally I go years without any beautification treatments so this is a special treat!

The next day, Kara takes me to the airport where I catch a small puddle jumper to Auckland at oh-dark-thirty (1.5 hours).  From there it is a 14 hour flight with a screaming mother and child during a very turbulent flight.  Truly one of the worst flights I’ve ever had. But, I make it to America, Dallas safe and sound.

Dallas

I spend a few days with my good friend Wayne in Dallas.  He was kind enough to let me store some of our “stuff” in his closet and it was time for me to go through it to see what I could discard.  Originally when I placed these items in his closet we thought we would only be gone for 3 years.  Well, we are going on almost 8 years now and surely I don’t need half of this stuff.

I tried on every single piece of clothing.  Items that did not fit (size 0 and 2) were put in a donate pile, items that were expired or documents that were older than 7 years all got shredded.  It was a great cleansing experience and fun walking down memory lane.

We had a lovely dinner with our friend’s kids, Sydney and Dylan (and Corey).  It had been several years since I had seen them so it was great catching up on their lives.  Top photo: Wayne, me, Dylan, Sydney and Corey.

San Antonio

Wayne and I drove to San Antonio (Boerne) to visit with Shawn and Sharron (4hr drive).  It always warms my heart to be around them!  They just fill my soul with lots of love.  Mason was home and made his famous brisket.  He is doing so well teaching high school students history, government, and economics.  All three kids are just doing spectacular!

After our glorious weekend, Wayne takes me to Austin (2.5 hour drive) to get my rental car and then he continues back to Dallas. 

Austin

It is spring time and the flowers are blooming.  This is my absolute favorite time of the year and I am so happy that I get to witness the natural beauty of Texas!

The Bluebonnets (purple) and Indian Paint Brushes (red flowers) are all over the highways, roads, and yards.  We also stop at Buc-ees which is a true Texas establishment with over 120 fuel pumps and over 100 toilets!  Only in America can a gas station with 100’s of toilets be a destination!

My dear friend Jamie flew in from Oklahoma and we both stayed at our best friend’s house, Michelle.  She is hostess with the mostest! These two women feed my heart and soul.  I am so blessed to have them in my life.

Jamie, Christine, Michelle

Jamie, Christine, Michelle

I was swamped with doctor appointments, but one night they took me out to meet our friends Jennifer and Heather at a beautiful place called Wild Flower.

Medical Appointments Galore!

Once a year I return to Texas to visit my oncologist and take care of a few medical things.  This year, I’ve been experiencing numbness in both arms and hands along with upper neck pain which was concerning to her.  So, along with the standard complete blood panel, she ordered an x-ray, bone density, and a bone scan.  So, I spent several days in and out of doctor offices trying to get it all done while I was in town.

The Good News:  I am in my 9th year of being cancer free and have one more year to go before I stop taking my chemo medicine (anastrozole).  After my 10th year I no longer have to come in once a year for blood work or doctor visits either as I will be considered in complete remission (applause).  

The bone scan did not show any metastasis which is fantastic news! 

The other good news is that my bone density showed that I am still in Osteopenia despite my bones getting worse, they have not crossed over to Osteoporosis.  

The Neutral News:  The x-ray showed that my C4-C6 has degenerated further and that surgery is in my future (at some time as I refuse to do it now).  This is causing the neck pain and most likely causing the numbness.  I can stretch my neck hanging from a doorway (except we don’t have any doorways on the boat).  So, I will search for other exercises to help minimize the pain.

Medical Care outside of America

For those of you who are wondering, we do receive medical care outside of America.  Matt and I visit the dentist, optometrist, dermatologist, general practitioners and a few others when the need arises.  We pay cash out of pocket, just like we do in the U.S. as we don’t have health insurance.  We have received excellent care all over the place including Panama, Chile, Costa Rica, French Polynesia, Fiji, and New Zealand!

Celebrating with Friends

To celebrate we gather a few friends for happy hour.  My friend Diana organized everything and it was fabulous!  Thank you for everyone who showed up!

It had been years since I had seen some of these beautiful faces!  Top: me, Erica, Missy and John, me and Jason.  Bottom; Jeff, me, Tracey, and Diana and next pic is John, me and Missy.

Oscar and John, Josh and Tiffany also came in for special Christine hugs!

My time has come to leave Texas and head to California.  I am so very grateful for all of the love and generosity my friends showered upon me, thank you from the bottom of my heart!

Stay tuned for the second part of my trip to America in California.  Coming up next.

Our blog posts runs 10-12 hours behind live events.  My trip to America occurred mid-March to mid-April 2024.  In our last blog post I summarize our sailing locations around the North Island.

Starlink, a Game Changer

Connectivity on the boat has always been a bit of a challenge.  On the one hand you want to live in the moment and enjoy the absolute beauty around you.  On the other hand you want to be able to download weather, stay in touch with family and friends, and do basic things like banking.  

For the last 14 years we have been hustling to stay connected while on the boat.  It was always a challenge and it was invariably expensive.  So, how did we stay connected before Starlink?  We had several options which we ran consecutively as inevitably one did not work for various reasons.

Local Data Plans

When we are near land, we would visit the local communications shop, pick up a SIM card and purchase a pre-paid monthly data plan.  This would allow us to get basic WhatsApp (which is an amazing, free, app), low data apps, cruising apps (navionics, weather), basic email, and would give us a local phone number.  On average, this ran between $50-$150USD per month.   As you can see, we end up with a lot of different SIM cards.  What we have found is that Vini, Digicel and Vodafone do not work in different countries.  So, we end up with Digicel SIM cards from multiple countries.

Iridium Go

We have Iridium Go which is a satellite based communications technology and was our go to means of communications while we were underway (on passage or on route).  Iridium Go gave us a limited number of minutes of voice calling, text messages (with limited characters), limited email (no photos, attachments, logos), SOS, and the ability to download weather.  You could not access the internet.  The bonus with the Iridium Go is that you can take it with you in case of an emergency and you had to evacuate the boat.

We had the external antennae, spare batteries, and multiple sim cards.  The equipment costs around $1500-$2000.  Prior to Starlink, we were paying $160 per month which gave us unlimited data and 150 minutes of talk.  Once we got Starlink, we dropped this plan to the lowest possible plan which is $70 per month which gives us 5 minutes of talk and 1500 text messages – virtually nothing but it keeps the account active.  We mainly keep this for a back up plan in case something goes wrong with Starlink and we need a communication tool.  Expensive back up.

GoogleFi

I no longer have a cellular company in the USA so when I return for visits I have to use our GoogleFi account (on an android phone $500.  Originally I would tether GoogleFi phone to my iPhone to give me connectivity when I am not in a wifi zone.  Then I just started transferring the GoogleFi SIM card to my iPhone which is much easier than carrying two phones.

The GoogleFi monthly service is $30/month.  We hope to cancel this service this year when I return to the states.  I plan to sign up for a travel sim with www.mintmobile.com with my iPhone for connectivity.  If this works, I will have to port my main cell phone number (which I still use for WhatsApp) to Google Voice which is free.  

Other Communication Costs

We have other communication costs including our website hosting fee of $50/mo, Predict Wind $299/yr, and a few smaller expenses.

Starlink

Starlink claims to give you access to the internet virtually anywhere.  If you carry around their dish which is not really likely.  However, it is a complete game changer for cruisers and people who travel both on land and at sea!  It now gives us internet access 24/7 whether we are near shore or thousands of miles offshore.  

Starlink is a satellite internet constellation operated by American aerospace company SpaceX, providing coverage to over 70 countries. Starlink has launched 5,828 satellites into space and 5,438 are currently in use.  That’s a lot of satellites!

Here is a photo of our Starlink dish which we mounted to our dinghy davit.

What does it Cost

Well, it aint cheap that’s for sure.  We were lucky in that Starlink was offering a special to New Zealand rural customers.  We were staying in Whangarei at the time and that is considered a rural area so our equipment cost $300 NZD ($180 USD) as opposed to $599. 

Monthly Plan

They have many plans but since we are moving a lot, we are on the “mobile plan” and the monthly cost while we are near shore is $199/mo NZD ($128/mo USD).  If we go offshore or are more than 12nm from land, we upgrade to the Mobile Priority Plan and pay an additional $2-$3 per gigabyte of data.  It doesn’t sound like much but it adds up quickly.

Connecting Starlink

The website brags of an easy set up with a simple plug and play.  However, for cruisers, we had to do some modifications.  The first thing you should know is that Starlink is a power hog!  It draws on average 3amps (with the motor disabled and ice melt turned off) on 12v.  Even so, at start up it can be as high as 7amps and if you are doing a lot of downloads it can run 4-6amps.

Disabling the Motor

So, why did we modify the unit?   We disconnected the motor that made the dish rotate as it searched for satellites.  We simply locked the dish into a flat horizontal position so it has easy access to the sky.  This was a little scary as you have to drill a hole into the unit so be sure you know what you are doing before you attempt this project.

Converting to 12 volt

We converted AC to DC power to save more power, to save the ‘inefficiencies’ involved in converting 12v to 120v and then to 48v which is what the Starlink dish needs.  This conversion savings is small, but also eliminates the super basic Starlink router that runs hot and doesn’t have much functionality.

Converting to 12 volt also allowed us to control and monitor the usage on our CZone setup, and we created a ‘schedule’ that turns Starlink off at night and on in the morning (our time zone).  And a button we can press when we leave the boat to turn off the dish when we leave to go exploring.

We are using a 384watt 12v to 48v DC to DC converter, and Tycoon POE injector to get the power to dish.  Since Starlink used their own wiring plan, we also had to create custom CAT6 network cables to make it all work.    We chose to cut/hack the ‘ethernet adapter’ cable as part of the hack and leave the ‘long custom cable’ supplied by Starlink intact.   This gives us the opportunity if any of the ‘custom hacked cables or pieces’ fail we can plug in the original router and cable and be back in business.  Tho we do have backups of each of the customized hackery to convert it to 12 volt.  

In the process of doing our conversion we also joined and helped others get this working and its amazing how ‘fragile’ all the pieces can be.  The converter wasn’t stable or the POE injector wasn’t putting out enough juice, or the custom CAT5 cables were not crimped cleanly.  Lots of debugging when into why the ‘speeds were off’ or simply intermittently working or just not at all.

Routers

We use a Mikrotik router so that we simplify our network.  Every device wants to create its own ‘hot-spot’ / access point.   That requires you to change your Wi-Fi connection depending on what you were wanting to do onboard.  Iridium Go! was the most annoying since it did not provide a way to change the network settings, so we were always switching networks to be connected to iridium satellite vs boat instruments vs media server vs anchor alarm vs CZone network.  Using a decent router we were able to disable all the ‘access spots’ so that connecting to our one network everything is available.  We can see boat navigation instruments and the internet at the same time without having to switch which device we are connected too.  

Conclusion

As you can see there is a lot that goes into “staying connected.”  Hopefully, we will be able to ditch GoogleFi by early summer (saving us $360/yr). We also plan to start disconnected Iridium Go during non passage times.  This would save us $70/mo every month we are not using Iridium Go.  However, when we wanted to initiate Iridium Go for a passage we would have to buy a $15 SIM card, pay $50 start up fee and pay the $70 or the month.  Sill a LOT cheaper than spending $840/yr for access we only use 12-20 days a year.

We will still need to purchase local SIM cards for access while we are away from the boat and of course we will have to continue paying for our web hosting and Predict Wind fees.  But in my mind, every little bit helps when you eliminate costs.

Feel free to reach out to us if you have any questions on Starlink, the set up, power saving techniques, and or other communications.

Our blog posts run 10-12 weeks behind actual live events.  We visit the beautiful anchorages of Whangaroa in our last blog post.