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Archive for the 'Tonga, Vava’u' Category

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Day 350

Wednesday, October 4th, 2006

Day 350: Arrival in Tonga-The Gang’s All Here
Day and Time: Wednesday, October 4, 2006
Weather: Sunny and Considerably Cooler
Latitude: 18 Degrees 39 Minutes South
Longitude 173 Degrees 59 Minutes West

Yesterday’s glorious afternoon turned into a challenging night with winds right on our nose. Yesterday we had north winds, then west winds, and then, switch, the winds were coming at us directly out of the south. This is all because the low that was sitting on top of Tonga moved southeast a couple of days sooner than expected. We made it to Neiafu, even though the north winds persisted all the way. The clouds cleared, however, and we had another glorious blue sky day as we entered the Kingdom of Tonga. This is the only monarchy remaining in the South Pacific and it is the only Pacific nation to never be brought under foreign rule.

Yesterday was Monday and today is Wednesday. We just lost a complete day. Tonga is just west of the International Date Line. They had the date line moved from its normal longitude of 180 degrees to just east of Tonga so they could use the marketing slogan “where time begins”. Some of the guide books do a take-off on that and say the slogan should really be “where time stands still”. Evidently life here moves a slower pace than life in most places in the 21st century. As we motored into the Vava’u group of Tongan islands, Mark and I were both struck by the totally different look of the islands here from anything else we have seen in the South Pacific. It looks more like the Whitsunday Islands in Australia, and that is because these islands are uplifted coral atolls. Once there were fiery volcanoes here. The volcanoes eventually sunk into the sea and the coral polyps began to build up the islands. Tonga has four such groups. In the south there is the Tongatapu Group. North of that are the islands of the Ha’apai Group. The next group north is the Vava’u Group where we are, and north of us are the Nuies.

Tonga means “south” and because we are further from the equator, the weather here is much cooler and a lot less humid than the Samoas. As we came in today, I felt like I was sailing in Maine in the summer. Blue skies, deep blue water, lots of green islands, and a cool wind from the 78 degree water-but you have to add coconut trees for here. We have been soooo hot for so long that maybe we will enjoy the cooler climate. Since the water temperature here is 78 degrees F and I think that means we will be wearing our dive skins. Snorkeling is supposed to be fantastic, so dive skin or not, I can’t wait.

Evidently this is THE place to gather in October before heading south to New Zealand. Once we were in VHF radio range today, we heard one boat after another that we know calling each other. Some boats we haven’t seen since Rarotonga are here like Ohana Kai and Wind Pony. Other boats that were in Apia with us are all here-Quantum Leap, Jade, Zephryn, Ababy, Kika, Noa ,and on and on. Gdansk was with us in American Samoa and they are here. And we were delighted when we got a call from Savior Vivre. We haven’t seen Jamie and Lucy since the Marquesas, so we are anxious to get together with them. There are almost as many boats here in the main anchorage as there were in Balboa in Panama and everyone we talked to today said that is a fabulous place. We talked to Wind Pony who has been here for five weeks and they plan to stay here until the end of the month when they will sail south to New Zealand. The more we heard, the more we thought we might just stay here and not go on to Fiji this season. If Tonga is as good as the reports, I think Windbird will be here snorkeling day after day for the next month. Sounds great to me!

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Day 351

Thursday, October 5th, 2006

Day 351: Tonga-What A Special Place
Day and Time: Thursday, October 5, 2006
Weather: Beautiful Clear Blue Sky, Sunny Day.

See Pictures Here

We’ve only been here one day, but we can tell that we are going to love it. It is very different in many ways from anyplace we have been. The town of Neiafu truly combines the old with the new. It is set up for tourists and has many wonderful little restaurants. There are Italian and Mexican restaurants, plus a myriad of small places on the waterfront that specialize in everything from New Zealand beef to the most delicious local lobster ( I had that for lunch.) It is not quite as cheap here as Samoa. There a cheeseburger cost $6.50 Samoan Tala which is only $2.00 plus a little US. Here a cheeseburger at the most expensive restaurant costs $15.00 Tongan which is $7.50 US. But a cheeseburger here is about 6 inches high with layers of Canadian Bacon, cucumbers, green pepper, and tomato, in addition to the hamburger, and comes with a huge helping of home fries. Not particular healthy, but lots of food. Most dinners cost anywhere from $15 to $30 Tongan or half of that US, so that’s not bad. The food market here is much smaller than in Apia, but it has a greater variety of vegetables, including lettuce. There’s nothing fancy looking here, but things are not really rundown. The people are poor, but you can tell that they are a proud people. So basically it is a very small town that centers around tourism and government work with very friendly people trying to hold on to their traditions.

Since Neiafu is a small town and the government center for the Vava’u Group of islands, there are a lot of government workers. They all dress in uniform, which right now consists of a black dress for women or black shirt and lava lava for men with a tavalu or woven mat worn around the waist. The reason for the black is the mourning period for the king. Young people are not wearing black, but almost everyone over 18 seems to be honoring the official mourning. The woven mats called tavalus are charming. I have seen pictures and thought they looked strange, but in person, they are beautiful. Each person has a different kind and some of them are of a very fine weave and decorated with woven scallops that look like fine crocheted lace edging. We are fascinated with each one. The quality of the weaving here is better than anyplace else we have been.

Our morning began with the check-in procedure. We had been told that we would have to pull up to the dock, but when Mark went over this morning to check it out, he could see that there was no way we could fit. A mega-yacht is tied to the wharf and takes up most of the available space. So Mark and John of Splashes decided to take their chances and just show up at Customs. They did and it worked. But then they went to Immigration and the Immigration Officer insisted that he must board the boat. So Mark and John brought him out to the boats. His name was Sunia Lilo, probably around 40 years of age, maybe younger. We had a delightful conversation. He wanted to know all about our sailing experiences and about our children. We, in turn, asked about his children. He has two girls, one eleven and one thirteen, and an eight year old son. We talked about schools, and I mentioned to Sunia that I have some children’s books onboard that I would like to donate to his son’s school. He got very excited and explained that they have a real shortage of books here. Sunia is going to make the arrangements to take us to the school to visit and deliver the books. I’m looking forward to that. He also talked about visiting his brothers that live in the United States, one in Fort Worth, Texas, and one in Long Beach, California. He said that he feels very lucky to be able to live here because he doesn’t have to worry about machine guns in the street outside his home. Evidently his brothers don’t live in the best part of town. This was one of the first times we have been reminded of the violence back home in the US. There’s some theft in the South Pacific, but not the kind of violence we have in US cities.

After check-in, we spent the rest of the day walking about the small town. We had lunch at a place called the Roasted Duck (correction–the Dancing Chicken) with Tom and Bette Lee of Quantum Leap. We saw some old friends-Kelly and Kelly of Moorea and Bob and Diane of White Swan. They were with us in Raitea and in Rarotonga and it was fun to see them again here. There are probably a hundred boats in this Tongan group right now, all waiting for the perfect weather window for the passage to New Zealand. We had hoped that Windcastle would be here today, but they stopped in the northern Niua Group at Niuatoputapu. They were fighting the wind and decided it was smarter to stop and wait until the wind is going the right direction. Actually Mark is talking to them on the radio right now and Doug is explaining that they might end up leaving from Niuatoputapu and going directly to Fiji. I’m hoping they will come here first.

Tonight we are going out to dinner at Tongan Bob’s with John and Janice on Splashes. Tomorrow we will stay here and then on Saturday we will head out to one of the out islands. That’s where the snorkeling is and that’s where I want to be.

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Day 352

Friday, October 6th, 2006

Day 352: Quiet Day in Neiafu
Day and Time: Friday, October 6, 2006
Weather: Cloudy, Rainy Day

See Pictures Here

I got in big trouble with my daughter Heather for “complaining” about the 78 degree F water temperature here, so I’m going to have to go easy with my descriptions of the beautiful weather. No problem with that today. We woke up to cloudy skies and then the rain began. It looks like we might have this kind of weather for the next couple of days, so we’ll just kick back and get some of the indoor projects we have been working on completed. I am still working on Samoa pictures and Mark is reading and rereading everything he can get his hands on about weather and the passage to New Zealand. It was actually very nice to have a day off and I enjoyed it tremendously.

Mid-afternoon we went into a place called the Aquarium. This is an internet cafe that serves breakfast, lunch, and dinner, and arranges dive and whale trips. There is also a shop with local crafts there. It is just next door to the Moorings and is very close to where we are moored, so it is very convenient. We did internet weather research and uploaded pictures from Samoa to the website. I am still not finished naming all of the Samoa folders, but it feels good to get a few folders uploaded each day.

We had a quiet dinner back here on Windbird tonight. Not much else to report. If the weather stays like it is now, we will probably have a repeat day tomorrow. If it clears, we are going to an out island. We’ll report in on that decision tomorrow evening.

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Day 353

Saturday, October 7th, 2006

Day 353: Anchored Off Vaka’eitu Island, Vava’u Group, Tonga
Day: Saturday, October 7, 2006
Weather: Partly Cloudy Day

We received an email from our daughter Heather and her husband Jed saying that they were spending the weekend at Jed’s family farm in Boothbay, Maine. Heather said they would be enjoying the brisk fall days with high temperatures in the mid-fifties and would be apple picking, walking in the woods, reading, and knitting. All I could think is that she and Jed are living in a completely different world from us. Is it really possible to enjoy high daytime temps in the mid-fifties?!! I’m sitting here in the cockpit tonight in a long sleeve shirt and am still cold with an air temperature of 75 degrees F. Tomorrow I could go coconut picking and walking across the island to a secluded beach-not quite the same as walking in the woods and picking apples, but almost-but instead, I think I’ll go snorkeling. We came to this anchorage after reading about the fantastic snorkeling possibilities, so I hope the books are right.

It is a small cruiser’s world out here. We got into the anchorage and immediately saw that Quantum Leap and Jade are here. We anchored next to Jade and Arnie came over and talked for quite a while once we arrived. It is hours later now, and just a few minutes ago we heard the shrieking laughter of young children as Nancy and Molly and their two friends from another boat returned to Jade. Arnie told us that the girls were “out” for the day with friends, but now we know they are back with the friends. The children out here lead such a fantastic life and it is so much fun to watch them.

We heard from Doug and Sylvie on Windcastle and they are hoping to leave Niuatoputapu tomorrow and arrive here on Monday. I mentioned in an earlier log that they chose not to fight the winds and stopped off in the northern Tongan islands. Another boat headed this way had engine problems and also had to stop in New Potatoes (the name cruisers use when they can’t pronounce Niuatoputapu), but we think that the engine problem has been resolved and that Matt aboard Elsewhere will also arrive on Monday.

THE only topic of conversation these days is the weather between here and New Zealand. We have definitely decided that we are not going to Fiji. We are going to enjoy Tonga and work our way south to the capitol at Nuka’lofa in the Tongatapu Group. From there, we will wait for that weather window to take to New Zealand. It takes tremendous study of current weather patterns to be able to even begin to predict the weather for the passage. Every cruiser we know is making this a full time job these days. We will be paying for a weather consultant, Bob McDavitt, but even with years of experience his predictions are not always right. You have the best advice you have and combine that with your own information, and then go for it. For now, however, I’m only going to worry about the weather tomorrow. Will it be nice enough to snorkel?

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Day 354

Sunday, October 8th, 2006

Day 354: A Visit to Mariner’s Cave
Day: Sunday, October 8, 2006
Weather: Partly Cloudy Day

See Pictures Here

The weather continues to be partly cloudy, but there are parts of each day when the skies clear and sun shine brightly. It remains cooler than in the Samoas, but it is certainly warm enough and we are enjoying “not so sultry” Tonga. Last night the full moon was spectacular here in the anchorage, but tonight it is hidden by clouds. At least we got to see the light dancing on the water last night.

This morning we got up and listened to the radio net. We heard Windcastle checking in and saying that they were leaving Niuatoputapu and would arrive in Neiafu tomorrow morning. We’ll be anxious to see them. Before the radio net was over, Kathleen from Quantum Leap came over to invite us for a day aboard Quantum Leap. They planned to pick up anchor and take a bunch of us with them around the island to Mariner’s Cave. This underwater cave has a wonderful love story associated with it and anyone sailing to Tonga has read about it. The cave has been known to Tongans for centuries, but it is named after William Mariner, the first European to have knowledge of it. You have to dive down about six feet and then swim underwater for about twelve feet to get into the cave. Once in there the surf coming in and out changes the pressure so much that when the surf goes out the water level goes down creating lower pressure in the cave. This results in a fog being formed. And then as soon as surf comes in again, the pressure increases again and the fog clears. Quite an interesting phenomenon.

So at 10 am, cruisers from Jade of Hong Kong, Blue Marlin of Norway, Iron Bark II of Australia, Zephyrn from New Zealand, Windbird (that’s us) from the northeast US, all boarded Quantum Leap from Mobile, Alabama, USA. There were six children with us, all under the age of 10. Quantum Leap is a big catamaran and it held all 20 of us with no problem. We had a great motor and then sail around to the cave. The only way you know the cave it there is the darker water near the surface. On the first trip in, Mark manned one of the dinghies and Kathleen the other. When they returned with the successful cave explorers, it was time for Mark and I and Tom and Bette Lee to go. I decided to man the dinghy and only go in if Mark, Tom, and Bette Lee had a successful go at it. They went in and then Mark was the first one out. He had actually had trouble holding his breath long enough to get all the way in and Bette Lee said she had a mild panic attack about coming back out, so I decided that I could skip this one. The waves were surging against the rocks and I really didn’t want to take any chances with my leg. At least, I’ll use that as my excuse. The only child to go in was Dominic, the grandson of Sandi and Joan on Zephryn. There were other adults who did not go as well, so I don’t feel like a complete ninny.

On our way home we started looking for whales. The Humpbacks from Antarctica come here to Tonga for breeding and calving between July and November of each year. It didn’t take us long to spot our first Humpback and the afternoon went uphill from there. We were able to watch the mothers and their calves as they frolicked in the water. It was quite a sight to behold and I’m not sure if the adults or kids aboard Quantum Leap enjoyed it more.

We returned to the anchorage and all of us went to our respective boats. It was a beautiful day. Tom and Bette Lee of Quantum Leap are very gracious hosts and I know all of us aboard appreciated the opportunity to enjoy the exploration with other cruisers. Since I really didn’t get to snorkel in the coral gardens today, that’s the main event for tomorrow.

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Day 355

Monday, October 9th, 2006

Day 355: Water Day–Snorkeling and Boat Bottom Cleaning
Day: Monday, October 9, 2006
Weather: Beautiful Blue Sky, Sunny Day

Our day began as usual by listening to the two different radio nets. We first listen to the Coconut Net at 7:30 am and then to The Rag at 8:00. The Coconut Net is run by those of us out here cruising. Different people volunteer to be net controller and then those of us that are underway check in with a position report. Once you have checked in as underway, you must continue to check in daily until you arrive in a new port. If a boat checks in and then is not heard from, measures are taken to find that boat. There is also one person who has taken on the overwhelming task of giving a daily weather report. Jeff on Kauila has been our weatherman for many months, but he will not be doing weather for the passage to New Zealand. That is where The Rag comes in. This net is controlled by the same guy everyday. He is in Fiji and has been there since 2002. Another person here in Tonga helps by reading the Grib files everyday. These guys give the weather report for the western Pacific and down to New Zealand. It is a great service and we are now listening more intently as we prepare for the 1,000 mile passage to NZ.

Doug from Windcastle checked into The Rag this morning and reported that he was 44 miles from Neiafu. Later this afternoon, he called us on Channel 16 to let us know that he was entering the pass into Neiafu. We can usually hear boats within a 20 mile radius on 16 and nothing here in Vava’u is any further than that. We are thinking of going back to Neiafu tomorrow night to see Sylvia and Doug, drop off some garbage, use the high-speed internet service there, and then coming back out to a different anchorage. If we do that, we will do some exploring on land here in the morning before leaving. It takes about three hours total to get back to Neiafu, so we have the time to do some exploring before returning.

We started our day today by snorkeling on the inside of the reef that is between two islands. We have read that the nicer coral is on the outside of the reef, but it is much more difficult to get there. We didn’t see fantastic coral, but we did see lots of beautiful blue sea stars, some mustard yellow biscuit stars, and an array of interesting fish. When we returned to the boat, we kept our dive skins on and went to work cleaning the bottom of Windbird. The cooler water, along with the wind, requires some sort of protection to stay in the water for extended periods. Our dive skins seem to be perfect and they kept us nice and warm as we worked to clean the waterline and bottom of the boat. Mark was under the boat for quite sometime today and he did finally get a little chilly. We didn’t finish the cleaning job, but we sure got a good start on it.

While we were cleaning the bottom, Quantum Leap left this anchorage. I think I have mentioned that the anchorages here are numbered, so they shouted out the number of their next destination as they left. Zephryn and Iron Bark also left today, and a boat named Cheshire Cat with Mike and Deirdre came in. Just as we were finishing up our cleaning job, we saw that George and Uta on Miami were leaving. We met George and Uta in Bora Bora and then again in American Samoa and we wanted to go over and say hello before they left. We had heard that they are having serious problems with their rigging. They have stress cracks where the rigging is attached to the chain plates at deck level. When we went over, Mark and George brainstormed some short-term safety measures that they can use on their way to New Zealand. If the rigging goes, your mast comes down, and that is certainly not something you want to happen on the way to New Zealand. It was great to see them again. They headed down to the Ha’apai Group this afternoon, and we will probably see them there next week as we head further south.

I ended the day by doing a laundry while Mark fixed dinner. He made a great chili that hit the spot in this cooler climate. The cooler temperatures also make for much more comfortable sleeping, and it’s almost time for that!

Posted in Sailing Logs Year 1, Tonga, Vava'u | 1 Comment »

Day 356

Tuesday, October 10th, 2006

Day 356: Back in Neiafu Harbor
Day: Tuesday, October 10, 2006
Weather: Partly Sunny, Partly Cloudy Day

See Pictures Here

Early this morning, we motored ashore and hiked to an abandoned resort. The path up was still well kept, and we really enjoyed exploring an area that was not long ago inhabited. We met Mike and Deirdre from Cheshire Cat and Nick and Gertrude from Tartufo on our way up, but once at the top, we had the abandoned resort to ourselves. It was great fun exploring.

Soon after we returned to Windbird, we pulled up anchor and headed back to Neiafu. We hoped to rendezvous with Windcastle, send a few picture folders to the website, drop off our garbage, and then head back out to the out islands. We successfully made contact with Windcastle and also got to see Jamie and Lucie from Savoir Vivre. We haven’t seen them since the Marquesas and it was great to connect once again. Tomorrow morning we will send the photo folders and drop off the garbage.

Our plan is to head back out to the out islands tomorrow, but who knows what tomorrow will bring.

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Day 357

Wednesday, October 11th, 2006

Day 357: Fangakima Cove on Kapa Island or Anchorage #7
Day: Wednesday, October 11, 2006
Weather: Overcast Day

We did just what we had promised ourselves this morning. We listened to the radio nets, went into town to drop off our garbage with “Pete the Meat” who comes to the dock each Monday, Wednesday, and Friday to collect trash, went to the Coconet to upload pictures to the website, bought a few fresh veggies at the market, and then headed back to Windbird ready to take off. Our only problem was that we didn’t know where we were going, so we got out the books and map and made some decisions. Before I go into that, I want to backtrack for just a minute and talk about “Pete the Meat”. He and his wife, Potato, run a little store that specializes in local and New Zealand meat called “Pete the Meat and Potato”. I took a picture of the sign as I think this might be one of the treasures of the South Pacific. Now on with the story of today.

After realizing that we are just not going to be able to visit all forty some anchorages here, we settled on four locations that we would use as our targets. As we were doing this, George and Barbara from Gdansk came over to visit and talk about trip planning from here to New Zealand, and then John and Janice from Splashes came over to make plans for meeting at an anchorage on Friday. George and Barbara have been here much longer than us and they have been amazed at the fact that the local people refer to their villages by the numbering system set-up by the Mooring Chartering company. Because the names are so complicated to pronounce and because there are almost fifty different anchorages in the Vava’u Group, the Moorings decided to use a numbering system. That was a few years ago, and now the locals have adopted that system. When you ask a local where they live, they might respond with “Number 11″. If you ask what island, they can tell you, but basically the simplified numbering system has taken over. Mark and I decided to visit #6, #7, #11, return to Neiafu which is #1, checkout and then go to #39 before leaving for the Ha’apai Group. If I say this same thing without using the numbering system, it goes like this: We will visit Mala off the island of ‘Utungake, then go to Fangakima Cove on Kapa island. From there we will go to an anchorage near Hinakauea, in front of a small island between Pangaimotu and Tapana. You get the idea. It is strange, but much easier to just use the numbering system. Once we made our decision on where we were going, we went next door to Windcastle to let them know. Unfortunately, they will not be joining us in our anchorage hopping. They are going to stay in Neiafu and work on repairing various boat systems that have broken, so we won’t see them until next week when we return to Neiafu.

We left Neiafu and headed for #6, but made a last minute decision to skip it for now and we headed to #7. This is a well protected anchorage near Swallows Cave that we will explore by dinghy tomorrow. There are also two villages that can be visited by following a walking track and the snorkeling is good. It is not as good as #6, but it doesn’t have the two knot current to fight. We hope to still visit Mala Island on our way back to Neiafu next week. We arrived here around 4 pm, but we had a real struggle trying to get anchored. There are three mooring balls here, but all were taken, so we tried to position ourselves between the moored boats. We just kept dragging, no matter what we tried. We know two of the boats here, Blue Marlin and Jade. Finally, Arni from Jade came over in this dinghy and helped us find a spot between coral heads. His approach worked and we were finally tucked in for the night. We will do our exploring tomorrow.

Arni stayed for a while to visit, while his wife Cam and her sister Vivian, and Runae and Idunne from Blue Marlin took the girls from the two boats to shore to visit a village. Cam and Arni have six-year old Nancy and seven-year old Molly. Runae and Idunne have seven-year old twins, Hedda and Marita. They are expecting another boat to arrive tomorrow with two more girls, one three and one seven. This place could get very interesting!

We are expecting some heavy winds in the next day or so and rain is predicted. But hopefully there will be periods when land exploration will still be possible. We do plan to leave here early on Friday morning and go to anchorage #11. This is near Tapana Island where there is a great restaurant run by a Spanish couple. Each night at Le Paella they prepare a paella as the main dish in a four-course meal. John and Janice from Splashes will meet us there for dinner on Friday evening. I can’t wait!

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Day 358

Thursday, October 12th, 2006

Day 358: Connections
Day: Thursday, October 12, 2006
Weather: Rain and Wind With A Low Sitting On Top of Tonga

See Pictures Here

Last night I was reading a book loaned to me by another cruiser. The book is Mahina Tiare Pacific Passages by John Neal and Barbara Marrett. Janice on Splashes loaned it to me because she knows John and Barbara and she thought I would enjoy their discussion of their passage from New Zealand to Fiji. Actually they were planning to leave New Zealand on a passage to Chile, Patagonia, Cape Horn, and Antarctica. But they met Bob and Beth Lux. I came upon this paragraph in the book: “Luckily, before we did major provisioning, we met with Bob and Beth Lux on Rhodera. They had recently rounded Cape Horn on their Hinkley Bermuda 40 and had spent several months cruising the 2,200-mile length of Chile. While John and Bob went over charts in the drizzly cockpit, Beth and I talked below about amoebas, parasites, water quality, and food availability in Chile. She descried living aboard in the cold, damp channels which crisscross southern Chile, the stark primeval beauty of the landscape, the shades of crystal blue glaciers, waters teeming with fish seabirds, seals, and penguins.” This discussion was enough to help Barbara and John change their minds and head to the warm water of Fiji only a 1,000 miles away. I relate this story because it really exemplifies the connections between cruisers. Bob and Beth Lux are members of our beloved Concord Yacht Club back in New Hampshire. They have been awarded the prestigious Blue Water Cruising Medal for their accomplishments as sailors, so you would expect to read about them. But still it is always a wonderful surprise to unexpectedly stumble upon the names of friends in a book.

And that brings me to another connection. On Sunday when we went to Mariner’s Cave on Quantum Leap, a couple named Trevor and Annie from Iron Bark II were with us. When we got back, Kathleen from Quantum Leap and Annie from Iron Bark came over to Windbird to talk. Annie wanted to borrow our Moorings book about cruising in Tonga. She has been sailing for many years, first with one partner, and now with Trevor. Trevor is from Australia and she is from England. They met in some remote part of the world. She started sailing with him, but she has never been to Australia. She seemed quite knowledgeable, but then so does almost everyone out here, so I didn’t think much about it. Then yesterday Arni of Jade was talking about Annie and one of the books she wrote. Mark immediately said, “Do you mean that she is Anne Hammick?” And indeed she is. We have a couple of her books aboard. She and her previous partner, Gavin McLaren, wrote The Atlantic Cruising Guide and Anne authored Ocean Cruising On A Budget. Now I know why she seemed so knowledgeable. She is.

The rain started last night and is continuing into this night. We had a very short period in the late afternoon when the rain slowed down and the sky became brighter. I was cleaning the mildew stains off the inside of our dodger and bimini at the time and Mark was working on getting weather faxes. But I called down to him with a plea to head to Swallow’s Cave. This cave is two mile dinghy ride from our anchorage and I really wanted to see it. We immediately put on our foul weather gear, gathered our camera and a flashlight, and headed out for the cave. It is called Swallow’s Cave, but the birds that live inside are White-rumped Swiftlets. The cave is big enough to enter in the dinghy. It is quite interesting inside, almost ghoulish. Many people over the last 150 years have been leaving their mark inside, so the cave walls are covered in graffiti. We’d like to return on a really sunny afternoon to see how the sunlight plays on the walls of the cave and in the water, but if that doesn’t happen, at least we have seen it.

We will leave here sometime in the morning and head for Tapana Island. We plan to meet John and Janice aboard Splashes for dinner tomorrow night at Le Paella, a restaurant on Tapana. And then we hope to meet up with Doug and Sylvia on Windcastle to attend a Tongan feast on Hinakauea Beach on Saturday night. After that we will get back to Neiafu and get really serious about heading south for New Zealand.

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Day 359

Friday, October 13th, 2006

Day 359: The Value of a Dry Cockpit
Day: Friday, October 13, 2006
Weather: More Wind and Rain

Friday the 13th combined with very windy and rainy weather kept us on a safe mooring in Fangakima Cove here at Kapa Island today. We really wanted to go around to Tapana Island at anchorage #11 so we could have dinner at the Le Paella Restaurant, but it is a very popular place and we were afraid that in the windy conditions, it could be crowded and unsafe. Thirty to thirty-five knots have been predicted. We know the mooring we are on here is secure, so we spent a quiet day here and hope to go to Tapana tomorrow morning.

The new King of Tonga and Prince ‘Ulukalala Lavaka Ata came to Neiafu this afternoon and will be staying through the weekend at the King’s Palace. We have heard that the King will be at church on Sunday morning and will then be attending a huge feast. We know it is possible to get from Anchorage #11 to town by road, so we will hope to make it to town on Sunday morning. The mourning period for King Taufa’ahau Tupou IV ends on Tuesday, and the new King has come up here to the Vava’u Group to make it official. He will return to the capitol of Nuku’alofa in the Tongatapu Group for the final ceremonies ending the mourning period. We are planning on attending a Tongan feast tomorrow night and will be interested in seeing if there is a return of singing and dancing. Both have been banned since the King died in early September.

We just returned from having a delightful dinner aboard Jade. Idunne, Runae, Hedda, and Marita from Blue Marlin were also there. Idunne made a great chili, Vivian and Cam made a sausage spaghetti, and I brought fresh salad and a chocolate cake. The cake didn’t rise properly, but it was still a big hit with the kids. It was a great evening. We learned a lot about Hong Kong from Arni and discussed a possible sail plan for years two and three of this voyage that would include the Philippines, Hong Kong and Viet Nam. Runae is interested in doing that and we enjoyed listening to the possibilities.

It has been raining off and on for the last 36 hours, sometimes a torrential rain and at other times just a drizzle. I mentioned in yesterday’s log that I spent part of the afternoon cleaning the mildew spots off the inside of the cockpit overhead canvas. It seemed like a really good idea until the canvas started leaking like a sieve. We have only a little bit of 303 High Tech Fabric Guard that is the water repellent that we use and we have looked everywhere in the South Pacific for something to replace this to no avail. We tried to order it from West Marine and have it sent to American Samoa, but it is illegal to send it via airplane. So last night for the first time on this voyage, we had to clear the cushions out the cockpit to keep them from getting soaked. Then we started thinking about the voyage to New Zealand and realized that it could be absolutely miserable in a leaky cockpit. It was then that we began to appreciate the wonderful luxury we have. Many have admired it and now we realize why. We have plastic curtains in the cockpit that can be rolled down to provide a complete enclosure. In the cold, wet weather we sometimes experienced in New England, it was a life saver. We didn’t expect to need it in the South Pacific, but we have had a very wet season and have used the enclosure since we arrived in the Society Islands. We have had passages when others have been miserable, but we have been fine because we have been dry. I was so sad to think that my eagerness to clean could cause us to have a soggy passage to New Zealand, but this morning, once the inside of the canvas dried, the leaking stopped. We are going to check with the Moorings to see what they use on their charter boats and hope that they have 303 High Tech Fabric Guard or something similar. If not, we are going to hope that things continue as they did today, not like the drippy conditions we had last night. Those conditions gave us a whole new appreciation for Windbird. She has kept us dry and happy so far on the voyage and we hope she can continue to do so for one more month until we are tucked away in New Zealand.

Posted in Sailing Logs Year 1, Tonga, Vava'u | No Comments »

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