Cruising World - June 2018

(Chris Devlin) #1
june/july 2018

cruisingworld.com

30


I


confess to having the wrong
perspective when it comes to
the city of Colón, Panama, at the
Caribbean mouth of the Panama Canal.
I see it as the last barrier, the last stand,
if you will, of bureaucratic dirt dwellers
attempting to prevent me from reaching
the comparative paradise of the Pacifi c. I
know that this is so geographically unfair.
The port of Colón is more than a den of
greedy thieves intent on robbing you with
a fountain pen — or, so they say.
But my own personal prejudice is
revealed in the fi rst factoid I tell people
about Colón: It is pronounced like the
perfume but smells like the body part.

Oh, the stories I could tell about
the old Panama Canal Yacht Club
before the wharf rats stormed it into
oblivion! The fl y-speckled restaurant
on premises sold a delicious and spicy
“chicken special” (complete with tiny rib
cage) that welcomed no inquiries as to
ancestry. Where else but Colón does a
shotgun-wielding security guard clear the
street before allowing you to dash from
your taxi to the cybercafe?
But every dark cloud has a silver
lining. On one visit, we met a pugnacious
German yachtsman who fi eld-trained in
martial arts each night by strapping on a
fake Rolex and strolling into the no man’s

land just outside the PCYC and taking
on all comers. I ask you, where else but
Panama offers a steady stream of young,
eager live combatants willing to fi ght to
the death daily? Where, indeed?
“And only four times have I lost a
watch,” said the German warrior. “Only
when someone pulled a gun or knife. You
must come with me sometime, Fatty! The
ghost of Bruce Lee would be proud!”
Yes, there were some interesting
lounge lizards at the dilapidated PCYC.
But that was 20 years ago, when the
place had a certain Third World, tequila-

scented charm. It’s much worse now. Put
it this way: In my watery world, the cow-
ards choose Cape Horn rather than risk
a night or two of slithering through the
bureaucratic sewers of Colón. Nonethe-
less, we shoved off from St. John in the
U. S. Virgin Islands on our fourth circum-
navigation with joyous hearts. Part of the
bliss of being a sea gypsy is philosophi-
cal; you have to take the sweet with the
bitter. We’d do a shakedown across the

“How bad can it be?” I asked my wife, Carolyn, who looked stricken and replied, “That is always a
stupid thing to say, Fatty. Always!”

BY CAP’N FATTY GOODLANDER

SHAKEDOWN to COLÓN


On Wa t ch


It was like sailing through
a wave-heaped storm
cauldron with huge geysers
of water clapping together
into random mountainous
wave trains.

Reattaching the control on the
Monitor windvane is dicey in a
protected harbor. Doing it at night,
offshore, in a tempest is nuts.

CAROLYN GOODLANDER
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