We ended up staying in San Evaristo for 5 days, waiting and hoping
for calmer winds but actually seeing, at times, winds gusting to 40!
None of us wanted to head out against that. We entertained ourselves
by watching movies and walking in town. We had made arrangements to
meet at the school Tuesday morning so we had a few days to wait. We
had a potluck on board and invited all the boats in the bay over.
Everyone showed up and really enjoyed the new Indiana Jones movie on
the big screen. We fished everyday and managed to feed ourselves
regularly with what we caught. At one point we had a fish fry on
Vltava and barbecued 44 filets and had three extra boats for dinner!
The big day came when we could finally take all the stuff we brought
to the kids at the school. My family and I have been doing this for
the past 4 years but never with this much stuff or on such a cool
boat! The schooner is 90 feet, over all, and, with a crew of seven,
looks very impressive arriving or leaving any port. It took 4 dingy
loads to get all the people and supplies ashore. We had arranged a
friend from town to drive the stuff to the school, while I walked
around town handing out things we had collected for the kids who were
either too young or too old for the school. The school goes from
about 5 years to 13 years and currently has 12 kids enrolled , all
children of fishermen in the village. When I finally made it too the
school I found all the kids, including mine, in a very active game of
soccer. There were 2-3 other boats cruising with us and a few other
people on boats in the bay who came to watch the festivities. After
everyone was exhausted from soccer we headed into the classroom to
start handing out the goodies. Each child received a personal bag
filled with everything they would need over a school year , like
glue, crayons, scissors, rulers, paper , and a lot of other good
stuff. The rest of the things we placed on the tables to the side
of the room. Pricilla, on Serenity, toughed it through a small
science class on dinosaurs and then handed each kid a dinosaur
puzzle. They turned out to be a real challenge and we all decided
that the Spanish word for puzzle(rompecabeza-broken head) was an
appropriate name. After mastering the puzzles I headed over to the
table to show the kids some of the cool stuff we brought along. We
had about 15 library books, everything from beautifully illustrated
kids books to books on science and dinosaurs. There was a huge box of
craft supplies and they were already thinking of Christmas and
decorations they could make. I picked through the whole box to
squeals of “Mira, mira!”(look, look) and then they got down to
business. They realized we needed to head out But I had promised to
show them the big boat and they weren’t going to let me forget it.
I also had to promise to come back in February and host a pirate
party with a movie on board, since I HAD promised the last time I
was there and they WERE letting me off easy today. So we ferried all
the kids and the teacher, Reyner, through the 40 knot wind gusts to
Vltava and let them loose. We managed to scrounge up enough hot dogs
and popcorn to feed the whole crew and they had a blast checking
every inch of the schooner and reading about San Evaristo in the
chart books. We said goodbye that day with only one minor catastrophe
of an older girl falling in off of the ladder. It was very funny when
she came up smiling and complaining about the cold water. By the time
she was in the dingy everyone was laughing and handing her their
sweatshirts. It will definitely be the story of the week in the
village. We had a great sail to San Francisco island and spent the
next few days cruising the islands and exploring the beaches. We
managed to get the schooner moving at 7.7 knots on our way back to
town and even sailed into the channel from the bay. This trip was a
real highlight in our already highlighted trip to the school. The
kid’s enthusiasm was inspiring and the schooner Is a great
classroom for all of us. 
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