Comments
Formergr t1_iy4lavh wrote
Oof that poor kid (and husband, of course).
[deleted] t1_iy4lwzw wrote
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KlimCan t1_iy4pevy wrote
Wait so the husband is missing as well?
PhilSpectorsMugshot t1_iy4rucz wrote
That’s correct.
Blenderx06 t1_iy4taqr wrote
Aw geeze I can't imagine what that poor kid is going through.
TheSplicerGuy t1_iy4x3xv wrote
My worst nightmare is to be lost at sea in the dark… fuck that
[deleted] t1_iy4zlh6 wrote
orangeorchid t1_iy55w29 wrote
The water is generally pretty calm there but there is a very extreme tide pattern. It goes out about 200 yards or more.
[deleted] t1_iy5bdsw wrote
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BlokeTunts t1_iy5ck44 wrote
Sounds like the husband is likely dead too
Chippopotanuse t1_iy5e24j wrote
Jesus. That’s horrific.
Spacebotzero t1_iy5svca wrote
Or a lake.
[deleted] t1_iy62z63 wrote
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TSL4me t1_iy6341p wrote
Wow, what type of boat? Do you live down there full time? Is it hard to get parts and boat mechanics down there(huge shortage up in Northern california)
What are the boating rules for licenses?
Have you ever been stopped by the Mexican navy?
I have a whole lot of questions.
madworld t1_iy67eh8 wrote
We are in a 1983 Hallberg-Rassy 352 named Trouble.
We purchased her in BC Canada as the pandemic started, and sailed her to SF bay. We left San Francisco August 24th and hopped down the coast. We are now in Bahia Tortuga, and we will be in La Paz by Christmas. Then north into the gulf.
No license is necessary, although you should be experienced. The Pacific can throw some shit at you.
Diesel mechanics are hard to come by south of Ensenada and north of La Paz. Parts are even harder, so you have to be self sufficient and carry as many spares of essentials as possible.
We've never come across Mexican navy.
PM me - I'm happy to answer any questions you have.
Here is our path since leaving SF.
https://forecast.predictwind.com/tracking/display/SV-Trouble/
TSL4me t1_iy693io wrote
Wow, living the dream!
If you keep heading south you would love Cabo San Lucas. I visited last year and the boating community of expats was huge.
Safe travels!
[deleted] t1_iy6e2np wrote
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WarrenMulaney t1_iy6vi20 wrote
How’d you like Morro Bay? (sorta my home away from home)
EvenHair4706 t1_iy7f40g wrote
There seem to be a lot of stories about tourists dying in mexico
SALAMI_21 t1_iy7o9a1 wrote
For once I'm glad I'm not tourist
miken322 t1_iy888u3 wrote
I've lived in Western Oregon most of my life, most of my relatives spent their lives on the Oregon Coast and its coast range, Astoria, Newport, Reedsport, Coos Bay, and Florence. The Pacific is wild. Every year tourists get swept out to sea because they turn their backs on the ocean for a selfie and a sneaker wave gets them. They walk out on the rocks too far when the tide is rising and weather coming in and get stuck. Even experienced commercial fishing boats go down. I wouldn't e er go out on a kayak without an experienced guide that knows the weather and the sea especially on the west coast of the Americas.
madworld t1_iy92ytk wrote
We sailed down from BC Canada, and had to come into Coos bay due to a storm (40 knot gusts). We were sitting on the beach watching the craziness, and we had jump up and run due to a sneaker wave that came up hundreds of feet more further than the other waves! I have a video I should post.
madworld t1_iy93dqx wrote
I have driven up and down hwy 1 for years, but this was the first time stopping by Coos bay. We loved it there! A quaint town in a bay full of anchored boats, next to the giant monolith belly of an ancient volcano.
It's really a special place.
WarrenMulaney t1_iy9g7zo wrote
100%. It's my favorite spot on the central coast. Great pic!
riptide81 t1_iyaxcaz wrote
I think it’s one of those things where there’s a lot more concern all around when it’s a foreign tourist. We have a bias towards things going wrong on vacation
Sad as it is a couple of kayakers drowning in the states might not make it beyond local news.
Same goes for someone dying in a fight with people they know.
PhilSpectorsMugshot t1_iy4i2uj wrote
Relatives of the Arizona couple said Kim’s body was found Sunday afternoon by a local fishing boat near Puerto Peñasco, Mexico, family friend Lisa Aumack told The Washington Post.
Earlier on Sunday, Mexican authorities in Sonora state said they had found a body matching the description of the couple, who were reported missing on Thanksgiving, but they did not confirm it was Kim’s body.
Allen, a real estate agent, and Kim, the executive director of the School of Forestry at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff, went to Mexico for the holiday weekend with their teenage daughter, Aumack said.
About 1 p.m. Thursday, they headed out for sea kayaking at a beach in Puerto Peñasco, a Gulf of California resort city also known as Rocky Point.
“Very strong winds came up,” according to the verified GoFundMe page that Aumack created to aid the search effort. Allen brought his daughter back to shore — it is unclear whether he rowed her back or swam with her — then went back to help his wife.
That was the last time anyone saw Allen or Kim, Aumack said. Their daughter is still in Rocky Point, Aumack said.