Arrival Orcinius! (By Ann)

After a long voyage from Fiji via Samoa and Christmas Island Orcinius has arrived in Ko Olina Marina. The cr was of Charisma and Orcinius are back in action! So fun!
(I am posting this so our Orcinius followers know they are safe!)
Aloha!

Waiting for Orcinius out by the seawall.

Coming into the marina from Fiji by way of Samoa, Christmas Island, Hawaii and Maui.

Once settled in, a little champagne for Lisa, John and crew Moses and Malo.

This And That

We’re presently recuperating and catching up on sleep. We’ll start boat work in earnest in a couple days, although as I write this Ann is polishing the stainless. She hates to see the rust! A thankless job.

Last night we rented a car and drove into Oahu to meet up over a couple of beers with Felicita the J-120 we sailed in parallel with from French Poly. They are staying at Ala Wai in Honolulu and we are 20 miles further around the island at Ko Olina. After seeing the downtown marina at Ala Wai, Ann and I are very glad we’re here. It’s so much nicer. So, good to catch up with Perry and crew. They are leaving for San Francisco on Wednesday. A fast turn for them.

Perry and Joe (Dave flew home the previous day) from Felicita.

Orcinius is scheduled to get in here on Wednsday, then it will be party time! We haven’t seen John and Lisa since we stayed with them at their house back in January.

Tomorrow, we’ll probably take our mainsail into town for some minor repair. We found a small tear in the leech and need to get that fixed.

The only bummer alert right now is that I reinjured an old injury on my left elbow on our last day out, Friday night. I burst the bursa about six years ago lifting weights and it’s susceptible to reinjury. I guess I bumped it just right on something as it has now swollen up and I’m having a hard time bending it without major pain. Hopefully it will get better in the next day or two, otherwise a trip to the ER will be in order. In the mean time, the old standby: rest, ice, compression, elevation.

Im also going to work on getting the passage pictures on this site. We have pretty marginal internet here – only up at the BBQ area, so we have to sit at the picnic tables to get reception.

That’s all for now.

Rest and Relaxation! (By Ann)

Our last night on the big ocean was beautiful! A sliver of a new moon welcomed a galaxy of stars that were so bright that visibilty was great. Very important as we rounded Molokai toward Oahu where we could expect traffic. It was a huge treat given the very squally night before.
Our timing arriving at Oahu was perfect…morning light on Diamond Head and Waikiki…the best view!

Landfall Diamond Head!

After 22 days at sea, we're happy to see land!

Ann doesn't waste a minute before going into "polishing the stainless" mode, so Charisma will look great when we get in!

We arrived at the fuel dock at Ko Olina just after 1 pm and waits for US Customs and crew

to arrive. They come from the airport so it took a while. In fact enough time to fold and cover the sails, wash the salt off of Charisma and straighten up the main cabin. Even had time to strip the bed and get the laundry ready to go. Customs required that we empty and wipe down the fridge and the entire galley with ant-bacterial wipes that they provided so I even got the galley cleaned before they left!
So we are here, walked to dinner last night and slept well, in the same berth! Bob is still asleep at 11 am and I am doing laundry.
Aloha…so glad to be here!

Mañana

Yep, time to leave Polynesia!

We’re headed to Hawaii, Saturday morning. The trip plan has it at 18 days, but we know that will change. In the mean time, from here to the equator looks pretty good. 10-15 knot reach with no forecast convective activity. Maybe we’ll even catch a fish. I just made a new lure that is suppose to catch tuna. We’ll see.

In the mean time, here’s Ann’s post on Facebook for today:

“Pasta salad, pasta sauce, curry dinner, fajitas, banana bread, chocolate chip cookies, ginger cookies,hard boiled eggs—-check! All vacuum packed and stored. Top off water tanks and we are headed to Hawaii tomorrow!”

All that’s left is for me to get some fresh bread in the morning and you know Ann will be “walking the dock” saying goodbye to all our new friends.

All Fueled Up

Fuel runs are often a bit stressful. It’s a lot of close-in maneuvering with a bit of wind and some current and you have a mixture where one little lapse or goof and you become “entertainment” for everyone.

So…we went about six miles down the lagoon inside the barrier reef to the fuel dock at Marina Taina (there’s no fuel dock up in Papeete). It’s a concrete sided wharf that is made to scrape off the side of your boat and has a shed roof that comes right to the edge of the dock so one false move and you either tear your mast off or the shed. Fortunately we managed to avoid either and topped off the tank and our two jerry jugs on deck.

OK, so now that we’re done, the wind has us pinned to the dock and there’s very little room to get out and turn in the tight space of the (small) marina. No problem, just get a bunch of Tahitians who were fueling their motorboat to push our bow out against the wind. This gave me enough room to gun the engine, and get on some speed so I can maneuver and avoid the catamaran docked about 20 yards in front of us. OK, so now we’re deeper in the little marina and have to do a 180 to get out. Fortunately, I can do a starboard turn into the wind, crank it in full reverse and do a pivot with Charisma’s “prop-walk” in about 1/2 a boat length. Phew! Try and do that turn the other direction and the tightest possible radius would be about 30 yards which would have us smashing into, oh, about the fourth row of boats in. That’s one of the stressful bits. You always have to keep the good options open in a very tight place you have never been in before.

All in a day’s work/adventure.

Just for the heck of it, another view of the waterfront at sunset.

What’s For Lunch?

Oil change!!

OK, not exactly, but the galley is the staging ground for the process. Change oil, new oil filter, new primary diesel filter and drain Racor filter and new secondary fuel filter. We didn’t need it just based on hours, but we’ll likely do a 24 to 48 hour straight run without stopping to get through the equatorial convergence zone (lightning and other bad stuff with little wind and/or squalls). Not fun and clean, new oil and filters is one less thing to worry about.

Good thing Ann wasn't here to see this.

We’re about done with our boat projects list. Ann walked to the store on a provisioning run – every day she makes the twenty minute walk down and back (in this crazy heat) and shlepps back a backpack load of stuff for the trip. On Wednesday or Thursday we’ll do some pre-cooking and vacuum bagging – several meals worth of pasta sauce and half a dozen curry in coconut milk that we add to rice for a one pot meal underway. Oh, and beer.

Oh, and did I mention that Ann first made a batch of cookie dough and then oiled the teak in the cockpit in this heat prior to going to the grocery store. All part of getting it done!

Plan to leave Saturday the 27th. Once again, three weeks and some change enroute.

Papeete Is Now Half Full

The Puddle Jumpers just left for the party in Moorea and in the space of about two hours this morning, the docks have gone from jam full to less than half. Those of us still here describe it as: “Ahh, we can breath again”, as in lots of open space.

Space!

So…we’re just “hanging”, doing a little boat work, socializing with the cruisers that are left, waiting for a weather window for the next leg to Hawaii. As of now, it looks to be next weekend. Likely Saturday. Couple things left to do. Change the oil and filters, service the batteries, top off the rum supply, stuff like that. Oh, yeah, stock up on fresh food.

Stay tuned.

More From Papeete

Ya know, we’re just chillin’.

A little boat work, some provisioning (for the next leg to Hawaii), and a lot of just, well, chillin’. Except it’s hard to call it that since it’s so bloody HOT (and humid). Fun to be here, but it will also be good to leave.

We’re currently looking at a window roughly June 28th. Give or take a couple days and the weather may change, but right now it looks like a good shot.

So… In the mean time what’s fun (in between boat work) is; we’re the guys who have “Done It”. You know, sailed across and now back. Most of the folks here in the marina are like us three years ago. They are good, competent sailors, but are feeling the “unknown” as they go west. From here it definitely gets less “charted” and there’s some mystery about what’s over the horizon. Since we’ve been there and back, we’re enjoying the attention we’re getting from folks who want a read on “what’s next”? Since there are plenty of significant hazards, I hope we are doing our part in helping to educate people on what to look out for. Anyway, it’s interesting being the “sage” advisors.

Tonight was another pot luck down the dock. So fun to mingle with all our new friends. Day after tomorrow is the Puddle Jump party that we did three years ago as our group continued from Mexico toward New Zealand. I think we’re going to go now that we have connected with so many of the new group heading across. And…there are a couple boats who are leaving here for Hawaii like we are, so we’re connecting up and will try to set a radio schedule to stay in touch over those 2400 plus miles and 20 some days of ocean voyaging.

End Of First Week In Papeete

Hardly seems like it’s been almost a week already.  Well, the first couple days we were zombies, so that doesn’t count.  Then we had to get used to the heat all over again.  It’s smokin’ hot here but it’s the humidity that takes the most getting used to.  We are just dripping all the time.

We’re forcing ourselves to drink lots of water to stay hydrated.  Once we sort of got used to the hot/wet conditions – in other words, you stop “fighting” it, we’ve been able to start getting stuff done.  At this point, we know where all the grocery/wine/baguette stores are and have walked all over town looking for new LED lights for the compass.  Yes, it finally did give up the ghost.  I tried to solder the connections back together but they were so old and corroded, they just kept falling apart.  So – we went to every marine store, “sorry sold out”, several electronics stores; “Non!” even found an LED light store.  The helpful but slightly snarky young lady there looked at the LED and said, “ooh, that’s really old, we don’t have anything like that!”  Me; “Yes, yes, but do you know where I can find one?”  She (after pausing a beat); “Hmmm, maybe in the past?”

So…as luck would have it one of the other cruisers on the dock has a box full of them that he bought upon leaving the US for a project he’s working on to replace some of his.  He gave us two.  An hour’s worth of tweaking, soldering, etc and we are the proud owners of a fully functioning compass light.  Yay!

Other projects completed to date:

-New jib sheet.  I had to cut one that I inadvertently (and terminally) jammed into the self-tailing jaws when I wound it into the jaws twice.

-New main boom topping lift.  I was looking at the rigging with binoculars and noticed some chafe.  Pulled it down and found chafe through the cover and a nick in the core.  130 feet of yacht braid later and we not only have a new topping lift, but also the two new storm jib sheets I’ve been meaning to get (we’ve been using the spinnaker sheets, but they are too long.  The topping lift was perfect once I cut it in half and threw away the chafed part which was right in the middle).  I also spliced the shackle on the end instead just a knot, for a clean finish.

-Took down and folded “the Whomper” and put the Yankee jib back up.  I think we’ll be beam to close reaching in trade winds (i.e. 15-30 knots) and don’t need the monster jib for the next two legs.  I list this as a “project” because in this heat, it’s a major project to do this much work.

-Ann has polished every bit of stainless – stanchions, blocks, pulpits, binnacle, etc.  People walk by and their mouths drop at how beautiful Charisma looks; no one believes we just got in from NZ.

-Ann has begun provisioning…she made a batch of ginger cookie dough today to be cooked as we get closer to departure.

-New toilet seat.  We actually found a toilet seat that exactly fits our 25 year old marine head (toilet).  The hinge on one side broke – unfixable.  I was going to fit blocks underneath the seat as a sort of fix until we could get back to the US and source a new one, but we sound it here.  Surprise!

One more big project is to fix the deck prism that started leaking.  These are foot long prisms mounted flush on the deck to let light into the cabin.  They are awesome, but every some years the sealing “goo” breaks its seal and springs a leak.  I’ve done the other three over the past several years and now it’s this one’s turn.  This is a two or three hours project in the direct sun, so I’m avoiding it as long as I can   😉

So…another week and then we’ll look for a weather window for the next leg from here to Hawaii.  About another 2400 nm trip.  Different conditions though.  This one starts in warm weather, crosses the trade winds at about a 90 degree angle and two to three hundred miles go through the doldrums of the equator.  More on the trip conditions and trip plan as we get closer, but if you’re looking at a map – we’ll head NNE to the equator, then north to get through the doldrums as direct as possible (they stretch East/West), then stay east of Hawaii as much as the wind lets us until we can sail direct even if the wind turns NE.

 

OK, enough “sailing talk”.  Time for a shower and some ukulele practice.  I’m practicing now in the cockpit (quietly) but am actually getting compliments from the other cruisers so I’m a little more confident in my playing these days.  I’m still using sheet music though.  Next step is to memorize some of the songs.  I understand that John and Lisa from Orcinius are practicing “Tiny Bubbles” so there’s going to be a crazy cacophony when we catch up in Hawaii!