Here, Jeana Fox catches up on the news while taking a trip to La Paz, Baja Mexico with husband Billy. The Foxes enjoy living aboard S/V Bambu, a Newport 41 C&C design in San Diego. Billy is a well-known boat surveyor and, as a result, he and Jeana were flown down to La Paz to perform an inspection. To keep up with the Foxes and the adventures they embark upon, follow their YouTube channel (Foxing Around).
Tom Gates, of Dana Point, California, recently took a trip to Kotor, Montenegro, a country near Albanian and Italy. His grandfather emigrated from a town called Strp to California in 1891. “The Kotor Bay pic was taken from Our Lady of the Rocks Church, which is on an island in the Bay of Kotor, offshore of the town of Perast,” says Gates. “The monastery for the Church is in the background.”
Eric Gufstason, of Flying Cloud Yachts, enjoyed reading The Log during his August trip to the Bahamas. This picture was taken on Thompson Bay Long Island. Gufstason said, “I had lots of fun fly-fishing with my son Charlie and friend Rich while the girls held the sand down on the beaches. We spent evenings emptying rum bottles.”
OC Weekly’s marketing sales coordinator, Nicole Tawney, relaxes with an issue of The Log on Hawaii’s “Big Island.” Tawney chose to turn her phone off and take in the beauty of the scenery around her while spending her time away from the grind.
There’s nothing like catching up with the news in scenic Ketchikan, Alaska. John and Laureen enjoy The Log in “the beginning of the last frontier,” according to visit-ketchikan.com. The area is also known for salmon fishing and the local Native American culture.
Pat Suggs visits his son, who serves in the U.S. Army and is stationed at Fort Campbell, Kentucky, with The Log in hand. Suggs’ son had deployed with the 101st Airborne Division to Iraq. This photo shows Suggs in front of the headquarters building among the monuments that are displayed outside. “I went by the 101st headquarters and viewed the various military displays honoring the division and its rich legacy,” says Suggs.
Mike Kohl, a four-time ASA Outstanding Instructor at Newport Beach Sailing School, reads The Log at the Ta Prohm Temple in Cambodia. Ta Prohm, known as the “Kingdom of Trees” for the giant trees that surround the temple, was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 1992.
In April 2018, Bill Pribil (right) and Tim Steffin (left) set sail on a six-day catamaran tour with their wives from Belize City through Belize Sailing Vacations. Here Pribil and Steffin visit Goff’s Caye, described by Pribil as “a beautiful sandy island off the barrier reef of Belize.”
Vince and Pat Flynn, members of Coronado Yacht Club, visit Saint- Tropez on the French Riviera during the month of April. “Some of the most amazing yachts in the world frequent this area of the Mediterranean,” says Vince.
Aldo Munoz and Jasmin Ibarra took The Log along on their recent trip to Beijing, where they explored The Great Wall of China. During their arduous climb, the weary travelers decided to stop and take a reading break before journeying to the top. A very long hike up the stairs, Munoz said it took more than an hour of climbing.
The Log has traveled many places, but this might be one of the first times it accompanied a diver 160 feet under water to the site of a shipwreck! Todd Roberts dove 6,000 miles from California’s coast into Chuuk Lagoon in the Federated States of Micronesia’s waters to view the Japanese merchant ship, Shinkoku Maru, which sank on Feb. 17, 1944. In order to take The Log with him, Roberts had the front page laminated.
Jennifer Ruddy is pictured with her copy of The Log in hand while visiting Iao Valley State Park in Maui, Hawaii. Known for the green peaks surrounding the valley, Iao Valley is also one of the best hiking trails for beginners and offers much in the way of natural beauty, according to gohawaii. com.
Marlene Carroll and Lisa Dagan, a mother- and-daughter duo representing Southwestern Yacht Club, visited the Western Wall in Jerusalem, Israel over Christmas week of 2017. One of the surprising things to them was Israel’s weather was similar to Southern California’s. The Western Wall, also known as “The Wailing Wall,” was built by King Herod in 20 BCE and is one of the most religious sites in the world for followers of Judaism, according to Tourist Israel.
Matt Udall aka “Captain Red” of Dana Point is pictured holding The Log on the Kona coast of Kealakekua Bay on “The Big Island” – Hawai’i. Near where he stands are the waters where the mast of HMS Resolution, the ship belonging to British explorer Captain James Cook, was broken. Jeff Johansen, who accompanied Udall, says the winds on the Kona side reach up to 40 knots and may have factored into HMS Resoultion’s mast breaking. Cook’s third and final voyage in 1779 ended in Hawai’i after tension between natives and Europeans resulted in a violent conflict claiming Cook’s life. Still, monuments have been erected in England and Hawai’i to celebrate the captain’s world travels.