Samana - General Info
Description:
The Samana Peninsula extends almost 30 miles out from the north coast of the Dominican Republic. Santa Bárbara de Samaná (usually called Samana) lies on the southern side overlooking the large bay of Bahia de Samana.
The bay measures about 40 miles east-west and 15 miles north-south and provides a well-protected deepwater anchorages, making it one of the finest natural harbours in the West Indies.
This town has an unusual history. It was settled by two shiploads of freed American slaves around 1824 and, to this day, many residents speak English as a first language.
Marina Puerto Bahia lies to the west of the town. It is a full service marina with all facilities including a pool, spa and hotel.
The feel of the town may change with the development of a new cruise ship dock, which will give the area more of a “tourist stop feel”. Future plans include a mega marina where the current anchorage is located, similar to the harbor of Charlotte Amalie in the Virgin Islands, with a long rock breakwater, marina and shops.
Cruiser Highlights:
Apart from the wonderful beaches (including Playa Rincon ranked as one of the 10 most beautiful beaches in the world), the principle attraction is the incredible sight of hundreds of humpback whales, which during January to March, gather in the bay to mate and nurse their young. Cayo Levantado (Bacardi Island) and Los Haitises National Park (a limestone karst plateau with conical hills, sinkholes, and mangroves) are both nearby.
Los Haitises is a must see, with rock mounds, rain forests, caves, mangroves, rivers, and a good anchorage. The park area offers storm protection in season for shallower draft boats on the other side of the bay. This park is a beautiful huge area with caves and waterfalls to explore by dinghy. Remember to obtain a despacho to go over there!
Good protection in the marina which is a suitable place to leave your boat, plus customs and immigration on-site.
SSCA and OCC Port Officer:
Denise Simpson
E-mail: deniswithane61@gmail.com
WhatsApp: +1 (829) 926-9392
VHF Channel 68
Sv Fair Lady [Morgan Out Island 41ft ketch]
Based in Luperon but can assist with info. for the whole of DR.
Position:
19°11.39.4′ N , 69°21.19.6’W (Marina Puerto Bahia)
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Wolfgang Weber says:
Apr 02, 2019 04:01 PM
We stayed in Samana Bay in the Bahia Marina which I highly recommend. Very protected Harbour with Security 24h so I left my boat for 3 weeks. Immigration, customs, and all Administrator are in the Marina Office.
As you are there you may use the Resort Swimming pool for free. Nice Restaurant and free Cocktail Party once a week. The Marina was not on my C-map, but on Navionics. Easy entrance and helpful staff. My recommendation for the north coast of DR.
Wolfgang Weber
SY Elise
Addendum: We left our vessel on a mooring in Samaná for 3 days while we went to Santo Domingo to visit our daughter and her family. Luis and his compañero, Domingo, said they would keep an eye on our boat. Boy did they!
We returned on Saturday, as scheduled, but the weather across the country was much worse than forecast. Much of our 3-hour road trip was through a driving rainstorm with considerable wind. We were somewhat reassured, though, when we descended through the mountains and the weather seemed much calmer on the NE side of Hispaniola.
However, when we reached Samaná, the town and its harbour were besieged by a wicked, unforeseen windstorm, with some reports of 60kt gusts.
As we approached the public pier we saw that our boat was not on the mooring, but was inshore, perilously close to the seawall! And we could see Luis was on her stern, frantically working with several small boats trying to save her from grounding further or from crashing into the sea wall.
Once on the pier, a familiar boatman took me aboard his boat – and despite the high winds, high waves, and chop – ferried me out to our boat so I help reduce our boat. When I arrived, Luis explained that several moorings had parted during the freak wind storm, including the one to our boat. They had already towed two boats to safety and parted a line trying to tow ours. Although we were aground, we were in the safest spot in the harbour because it was only mud. No rocks.
Once aboard I started, I checked the bilges, seacocks, strainers, and engine fluids and then started our Perkins. Meanwhile, Luis hailed a tour boat and took one of its mooring lines aboard and secured to an aft cleat. Working in tandem – our Perkins in reverse and the tour boat pulling astern – we were gently pulled out of the mud and into deeper and safer waters.
From their, Domingo guided us in his boat to a barrier island about a 1/2 mile off the town where we anchored in 35′ of water only a couple of boat lengths off the island’s lunch tropical beach. About an hour later, the winds went from a steady 30+kts down to 2-4kts, where they remained overnight.
The next morning, winds were still calm, and we dove into the still, clear water to inspect the hull, rudder, and prop. Fortunately, everything was AOK – thanks in large measure to the rapid, volunteer assistance from Luis, Domingo, and several other townsfolk who put their own vessels at risk, and perhaps their own safety, during the storm to assist us.
In short, we have nothing but great things to say about Samaná and its people.
We have been in Samaná for 4 nights now, and we have enjoyed it very much. I worked here with the US Navy for a few weeks in 1993, and the town is very much as I remember it.
We were greeted in a small boat upon arrival by Luis, a harbour agent. He claims to be licensed by the port authorities, but I have not verified this. Regardless, he has been professional, helpful, a pleasure to work with, and I recommend him without reservation.
For example, although we arrived after normal working hours, within 60 minutes of our arrival, he brought the Comandancia Del Puerto aboard our vessel, along with someone from the immigration office. We provided photocopies of our passports and were granted permission to go ashore that evening. He returned the next day by water taxi and ushered me to the immigration office where I presented everyone’s passport and paid the visa entry fees for the crew ($12/person) and vessel ($75). In addition, we negotiated a rate of $10/day for the mooring ball with the owner, with a reduced rate of $5/day if we stayed a week or more.
Moreover, Luis and Domingo, his water taxi compañero, towed our dinghy to a rustic boatyard where we had some fibreglass repairs done on our rigid dinghy at a very reasonable price. They also brought out 90 gallons of good clean diesel in 18-gallon jerry cans to top off our tanks. We also went to an upholsterer who did an excellent repair job to the head of our drifter reaching sail.
To get ashore we’ve done a mix of water taxi with Domingo or used our dinghy.
With the latter, we’ve left it at the public wharf, where Luis assured us it would be safe. So far, he’s been right about that, too. We have generally tipped someone at the wharf 1-200 pesos for keeping an eye on the dinghy.
I should add in closing that Luis and Domingo work for tips. Although we have never discussed a specific amount per service or per day, we gave them both the equivalent of ~$20/day for the days they helped us out. They seemed content, and I believe we got excellent value for the services they performed for us.
If you need I car I would recommend XAMANA Car Rental. We are at Puerto Bahia marina and they will bring the car to you so you don’t have to make the trip into town. The cars (we rented multiple times) are in good condition and they will take cash or credit cards. The owner is very friendly and helpful.
This comment was sent by e-mail, 6 May 2017, and is posted on behalf of SY Blue Flyer:
Here we are in Samana, Dominican Republic (our port of entry).
An interesting channel coming into the main harbour, not difficult and I found the Navionics very accurate. There is a Marina outside the town, but it is expensive, so I have taken a buoy off the town for 2 nights at US$20 per night. The buoys are serviced regularly and have large concrete blocks on them.
On arrival, Chico met us and is acting as our agent. If anyone’s going to visit here I can recommend him highly. His English is good, he works in Florida during the off-season here.
Checking in is expensive and the preferred currency is the US $ but the Peso is fine as well. They give 47 pesos to the dollar. All the offices are local and the immigration officer came in specially for me on Saturday. The navy (Customs) came out to the boat to check us over and take the paperwork away for checking us out tomorrow so that we can leave at a reasonable time on Monday. The crew were not allowed off the boat until checked in with immigration.
The town is very pleasant, with little or office, so tourists are safe here. We went to a supermarket to stock up for Cuba, and then to a fruit and veggie market. All done on a TukTuk, not much room with 4 people and all the shopping. Prices are very reasonable.
Fuel is in Jerrycans unless you do as we did. We filled up with our own supplies and got our cans refilled, by Chico, at the service station. So fresh clean diesel.
We took a very reasonable tour, again thank to Chico, all day. Visited a 45 metre waterfall and another beautiful town. You can negotiate this with Chico.
In total, a very worthwhile port to go to if you’re in the neighbourhood.
Hugh Pilsworth
SY Blue Flyer
Samana is a geat city and very safe. I recommand to stay at the marina. Its a 5 Star marina at half the price with all the services. From the marina you must take a bus to the city 40 pesos..
We are trying to escape Samana. We’ve had westerly winds and calms, preventing us from going on to Luperon. We’d expected to really like the place and had planned to spend two weeks going around Samana Bay. However, the officials will not allow that.
We went to Los Haitises national park, which was great, but we were told we had to report back to the Commandancia in Santa Barbara the same day. The park was great, and we could have happily spent a week just there, exploring and enjoying the wildlife. But it was not to be. We had to return to anchor in Santa Barbara with its extremely noisy bars and clubs and cars full of speaker parked on the promenade blasting out competing for ‘music’. Even my kids, who love music festivals, are being driven crazy by it.
Commandancia is very inefficient. It took an hour today just to find a form in the office that they’d filled in for me just four days ago – not that the port is busy. Just two yachts have left in the intervening time. It took all afternoon to get a despachio – permission to leave for Luperon. And we haven’t been allowed to anchor anywhere at night other than in Santa Barbara.
This isn’t exactly one anchorage more perfect than the last, as described in the free cruising guide. It’s just the one anchorage and a very very noisy one at that. I doubt everything in that guide now.
Another sailor told us of his experience at Boca Chica. He wasn’t allowed to park in the designated anchorage but forced to take a berth in the marina or pick up a mooring, at $25US a night. Note that the free guide which talks up this place so eloquently (and heavily promotes the south coast as the best route) is sponsored by the owner of the Boca Chica Marina.