Peeling Potoatoes

Ann and Bob just enjoying Moorea

Jerry has hit it spot on- that what some of these days are about (or should be about) is just doing little things exceptionally well and “in the moment”.

Today, I did napping exceptionally well.

OK, prior to the napping we took the dinghy way out to the barrier reef and snorkeled for an hour, then came back to Charisma and scrubbed the waterline and the barnacles that have collected on the underwater metal parts like the rudder hinges and propeller strut. That took about an hour and a half of hard scrubbing in the water so, yeah, I did a really good nap.

After that nap, Ann and I each took a shower (on deck-she with the solar shower, me with our teapot) and then in preparation for having some friends over for cocktails–I took another nap. This one in the quarterberth. The previous one was just on deck, but the sun was getting too intense around 1500 to nap on deck. Ann made cookies. Exceptionally well. I know ’cause I got to lick the spoon.

So, peeling potatoes. No adventure, just enjoying the day.

This evening we had a delightful time hosting “Ladybug”-a couple from Canada in a Coast 34 (Chris and Rani) and Vicky from “Inspiration At Sea”, a Hans Christian 38. We swapped lies as they say, for 3-4 hours and they rowed home in the moonlight. Fortunately we had leftover stew which we heated up and just finished. I’m going to post this note and go up in the cockpit and enjoy the beautiful night-our last in Moorea.

We’re leaving tomorrow. There’s a storm of sorts coming in late tomorrow. Doesn’t seem to be packing a lot of wind, but it’s supposed to rain for a while. Depending on who you talk to anywhere from a few hours to three days. My take from last night’s grib files is about 12 hours from Sunday evening into Monday sometime. We’ll see. I just hope it waits until we’re snugged back in at the Quay (the floating dock downtown) in Papeete.

Around the Island

Today we went around the island. But it was in a car instead of a boat.

Our anchorage from up on the hill

Pineapple plantation

We bought a pretty pearl necklace at the craft fair~

Bob and Bruce at the Bali Hai

Here's fish marketing island style. The price in Polynesian Francs is 90 to the dollar.

One of the other boats here, “Inspiration At Sea” has a car that she rented for two more days and she offered to drive us and “Gato Go” around the island. We had heard there was going to be a festival on the other side and thought that sounded fun. We had pictures of hula dancing and other Polynesian events, but it turned out it was a bandstand with some nice musical groups, but not too much else. But a good time was had and it was fun to see the whole island from a different perspective than we’ve been having. We ended the day with a great pizza dinner at a little French pizza place. They made the pizzas right in front of us and we could watch as they put them in the wood fired oven. They cook pretty fast that way-about 3 minutes.

We started the day with some water sports. I inflated the stand-up paddleboard for Ann to paddle around the anchorage visiting and I jumped in a did some snorkeling. There’s a reef not 40 yards from us and I explored that as well as checked the anchor (it was so buried in the sand/coral I couldn’t see it. The chain just disappeared into the sand).

So, that was our day. Simple, relaxing and fun. Tomorrow will be boat washing. We’ll jump in and scrub the waterline which is fouled with slime. The bottom itself where there’s anti-fouling paint is in great shape, but the waterline needs scrubbing. The through hulls need cleaning too. Barnacles are threatening to close them up, so I’ll go underwater with a screwdriver to peel them off. Boat maintenance unfortunately cannot be delayed or you pay the price.

Sunday we’ll finally leave here and sail back to Papeete for a bit before continuing on our journey through French Polynesia. Our three month visa will be up come July 25th, so we’ll need to move on soon if we’re to see the islands of Huahine, Raiatea and Bora Bora. Then on to the Cook’s.

Just Sittin’ Around

Decompression day. We did little and enjoyed it. I dinghied over to the store about a mile away to test the “fix” on the dinghy motor prop. Works now, so I guess I fixed it by drilling three screws through the hub and into the brass bushing inside. I also went over to Gato Go and hopefully helped them a bit with their shortwave email. I think they have RF interference from some of their electronics and I helped them understand what to turn off until they have a chance to figure out which is the offending device (wind gen, refrigerator or inverter) and get a filter.

Ann updated our food inventory by going through all the storage spaces and comparing what’s here to her spreadsheet. It was surprisingly close. She’s done a great job of monitoring what we have and what we need. We need more orange Gatorade and peanuts!

We actually had big plans to snorkel and paddleboard, but as the day progressed our plans didn’t. However we ARE going to do those things tomorrow because it will be our last day here.

We were invited for dinner tonight on Blue Rodeo. We haven’t seen them for a month as they got ahead of us when our alternator went out and we have to stop and fix it. Great to see them again and trade stories on the goings on of the “fleet”.

OK, boring day. Sorry. But we all decided after the other night (which everyone is still reliving) we’re very happy with boring.

Calm, Quiet Day

They started the hike around the other side of the mountain on the right.

The hikers take a break

Not a lot to report today. Ann went on a hike up into the mountains of Moorea with the folks from Gato Go, Buena Vista and Ladybug. They pretty much covered the same terrain we went over on our island tour in a 4×4, so you know it was a strenuous hike.

For my part, I have a hula dancing injury. The bottom of one of my toes has a split in the skin from hula dancing on asphalt. OK, lame excuse, but it’s the only one I have. I also needed to do a bunch of little boat projects-and one bigger one. The little ones included the door to the head. The mechanism only works when you turn the handle counterclockwise. I took it apart and found a couple of parts to be extremely worn. Not having new parts, I mixed up some MarineTex epoxy and built up/strengthened the worn part. Success. So far, it’s like new. We’ll see how long it lasts.

The other big job today was fixing the outboard. Yesterday on the way back from the stingray petting expedition, the prop started free-wheeling on high speed. It would drive the dinghy on low RPM, but as soon as I added some throttle, it would free wheel. I took it apart today and the shear pin is fine. However, when I put the shear pin in and turned the prop with pliers, the inner bushing spun. Worn out. So, I drilled three holes through the outside of the prop into the inner bushing and screwed some self-tapping screws. Finished too late to tell if that is the solution. I’ll test it tomorrow.

That’s about all for today. We’re staying her a bit longer now that at least half the boats here have cleared out.

Swimming With Stingrays (and sharks)

They let you pet them. They are surprisingly soft to the touch

Yep, we are back out swimming with dangerous fish. At least dangerous in theory. Here in Moorea there’s a spot where the stingrays are quite tame and people go out on the reef and feed them. They are very friendly. Like cats really. You stand in the water (it’s about 5 feet deep) and dozens of large stingrays come swimming over and start nuzzling you from all directions. At first it feels strange. They are so soft. You can pet them and they seem to like it. They are about 4-5 feet across-much larger than I would have expected. We brought canned sardines to feed them. If they are hungry they will practically climb up your body, even if you stand up to get part way out of the water.

Feeding stingrays with sardines has one downside: the sharks smell the food and come over. We had a dozen black tip reef sharks come over and get in on the action. However, I’m not feeding the sharks by hand or nuzzling with them. Fortunately they are a bit shyer than the stingrays and kept their distance for the most part, although one swam within about 5 feet of Ann’s legs as she was feeding a stingray. Ann was too distracted to notice.

That was our morning entertainment. In the afternoon, there was a potluck on the beach. There are still about 40 boats here from the Rendezvous, although many are clearing out, but it’s a last chance to see a lot of friends all in one place. As you can imagine a lot of the discussions are about how fortunate we all are for having survived the windstorm a few nights ago. The stories keep coming out. And one particularly heroic sailor was given a special award today, made by some very clever cruisers. It was a “Super Pedro” cape. Pedro actually jumped into the water from one boat and swam to another to help an out of control boat get anchored safely. The boat in question was the very boat that miraculously missed us as it veered through the anchorage. Today we found out that it actually went between us and our neighboring boat prior to coming into contact with the two boats anchored behind us. We still have no idea how they managed to miss us, our anchor and our neighbor. But thank goodness for bold sailors like Pedro. Very courageous. I imagine tomorrow the number in the anchorage may be down by half. Our strategy is to let folks clear out ahead of us-they are all heading west, the same direction we’re heading-and in turn they will spread out making future anchorages more quiet and back to the 3 or 4 boats that we’ve become accustomed to. We’ll stay anchored here in Moorea another day or two then head back to Papeete for another week to provision, do some boat work and see more of the town and environ. It’s kind of a fun city and after this there are no more big cities until we reach New Zealand in November.

Note to Jerry: Don’t worry, we’ll be back in the wilderness soon enough. This little stop has been like a company picnic. Fun to see everyone, play some silly games and reconnect, however it’s nothing but an interlude. After we step off from here there are a few more commercial spots (Bora Bora comes to mind) that are supposed to be beautiful to see, but too easy to get to and therefore “found”. Then back to the adventure life of visiting little islands and atolls that are either deserted or have very small “thatched hut” kind of villages and snorkeling, kayaking and paddleboarding (at least for Ann who has mastered the tippy board that I cannot yet stay up on).

In the meantime Ann is going hiking tomorrow with a group of friends. I’m doing some boat projects, not the least of which is fixing the dinghy propeller. Today it started spinning freely at the higher RPMs. The engine spun up, but the prop just “slipped”. This means we can go about 2 knots max. It appears there is a rubber bushing inside that grips onto the shaft and it’s slipping. Yet another project where I’ll take something apart I’ve never had to deal with before and probably find I don’t have a part for it. Fortunately I’m sure there’s one in Papeete, where we’re going next. Note to future cruisers: Make sure you have a “shear pin” and the rubber bushing inside the prop that absorbs shock and transfers power from the transmission to the propeller. I’m told that when the bearing gets older they just wear out. I’ve never heard of that before, but the shear pin is intact, so the bushing theory sounds plausible. I’ll write up my findings in a future note.

The Anchorage Turned Into a Bowling Alley

You can see the channel of deeper (blue) water where most of the boats that dragged were.

That’s what sudden 40 knot wind and torrential rain combined with a boat rally that has waaay too many boats packed into a relatively small space becomes. Boats blowing loose down the “alley” bouncing off each other like so many bowling pins.

First off, we had a great day yesterday. The Lattitude 38/French Polynesia Sailing Rendezvous in Moorea was a great success. Much fun and camaraderie were had by all. There were lessons in Polynesian arts (including basket weaving from coconut palms, Parea making with traditional dyes) and Polynesian games culminating in the much anticipated outrigger canoe races. As an aside here, I’m disappointed to report that neither Ann’s nor my team made the finals. OK, we didn’t even make it past our first heats. I’m not sure what Ann’s excuse is, but our lead Polynesian paddler (we had two per 6 person boat) looked back at one point, surveyed the canoe and pronounced; “You team too big!”

After such a great day of festivities, everyone retired to their boats right around sunset and were rewarded with an awe-inspiring lightning show beyond the mountains in the distance during the cocktail/dinner hours. That should have been the tip off to “get ready”.

As darkness (and ominous looking clouds) drifted down over the anchorage, I was just finishing sending last night’s blog entry and had come back up into the cockpit to enjoy a last glass of wine for the evening with Ann and watch the sky lighting up with the continued (and now much closer) lightning show. A few drops of rain started falling and we reluctantly moved into the cabin to close the hatches. Very suddenly, in what one person later described as “about a couple of micro-seconds” the wind went from “balmy” to blowing 40 knots-sustained. Not gusting, but a solid 40. Equally as suddenly the drops of rain turned into a torrential downpour. The combination immediately set loose chaos and havoc in the anchorage with the first gust.

Before I describe the carnage, I’ll add a personal note about how I felt setting our anchor the previous afternoon that could have led to us “cutting loose” in to blow. When we got to Moorea the afternoon before, there were at least a dozen other boats who got there at almost the same time. There were also a couple dozen others who were already here, turning a modest size anchorage into a tight one. The result was that everyone was jockeying for a spot and wanted to get the “hook” set as soon as possible to establish “their territory”; we were all tired from a trip that had substantial wind and good size waves. In Charisma’s case, instead of our custom of slowly going through the anchorage twice-once to find a spot and rehearse how we’re going to line up to drop anchor and then back around for the actual event, I told Ann as we were briefing what and where we would anchor, that we were going to drop on the first pass. We very quickly identified a spot, moved toward it (ahead of three other boats heading for the same spot) and dropped. We then went through the litany of backing down, testing the hold and setting the anchor. Backing down worked. Testing worked, but when we increased engine RPMs in reverse to set the anchor I felt it break out and drag. I signaled from the foredeck to lower RPMs, which Ann did and the anchor reset. We then tried to firmly set it and it broke loose. Since it was setting at moderate RPMs and the anchorage was so calm, and we had a full 200 feet of chain out-which is a real workout to crank back in with our manual windlass-I was sorely tempted to leave good enough alone figuring that 200 feet of chain would keep us from dragging. Boy, am I glad I didn’t take that shortcut. I have learned that things change really fast and usually go from bad to very bad in a heartbeat and when they do it’s too late to “fix” something like a bad anchor placement. So, up came the 40 pound anchor and 200 feet of chain (at a couple pounds per foot). Two cranks on the windlass per foot of chain. 400 cranks at least. Good thing we have lots of Advil on board.

Once the anchor was back up, we maneuvered a little to one side of the first drop to a spot that looked like it might provide a better hold and dropped again. 200 feet of chain went back out. Reverse, test, set. This time the set worked. I could feel the anchor dig in and despite full reverse power, Charisma didn’t move. This proved a decisive move when “all hell’ broke loose last night.

What happened? When the squall hit there was literally no warning. One minute it looked like a little rain squall that we see so often and the next moment wind speeds that popped anchors that were not up to the task. Within moments, numerous boats in the anchorage broke loose and started dragging and drifting downwind onto others who were still anchored. It was ugly. You could hardly see because the rain was being driven so hard it stung to look into it. Dozens of anchor lights suddenly blurred into smears of white light against the black sky with lightning occasionally adding further confusion to the chaos. Searchlights started to light up, stabbing the night sky. Deck lights flicked on, shinning down from the mast adding a surreal glow to the whole event. Rain smearing glasses. Skimpy tropical tee-shirt and shorts soaked to the bone. Cold. Scared and concerned that someone would run us down without us having time to react. Adding to the confusion was the radio which suddenly came alive with shouts from boats that had come free and ones who were about to be run down by a 15- ton menace rapidly gaining momentum as its anchor broke loose that is being pushed by 40 knot winds. Several of the calls for help were particularly alarming. One boat with only one person, a single handing woman, on board was shouting into the radio that she was adrift and heading for the reef and could anyone please help. Another boat was being announced on the radio as adrift-their owners were having dinner on another boat and not aboard.

Those whose anchors were holding had turned on their engines (including us) and were actively using forward and reverse power even while still anchored to avoid those who were drifting down on them. Back 40 feet, oh no, here comes another one, forward 80 feet. You are limited since your anchor is still attached like a dog chained to his tree, but in many cases that small amount of movement meant the difference between two hulls smashing together and safe travel.

In our case, we narrowly dodged two bullets. One was almost miraculous and we’re still not sure why we didn’t get hit. There was a boat just upwind of us. Within minutes of the gusting wind and rain I finally got my wits about me to the point where I looked around to see where they were and noticed they were gone. They were nowhere to be seen. We didn’t have a lot of time to figure that one out as the boat whose owners were on another boat for dinner came barreling down and hit the boat just upwind of us. I thought we were next abut just as it started to pick up momentum, its anchor caught, jerked it around and it stopped about 100 feet away. About that time the rain started to ease back a bit and I could see the rest of the boats upwind. ” Bowling Alley” was the thought that went through my head. 40 foot long boats were careening downwind and hitting others, then tangling into a knot and twisting into a dance of fiberglass, metal and wood. Boats sitting still at anchor facing into the wind. Boats turned right tangled on others. Boats turned left. Warnings on the radio.

The aftermath: It was a “fortunate” squall. There was no major damage or injury. No one lost a limb or rode up on the reef. There was some bent metal, torn wood, a few bruised egos and still some sorting out about who drifted onto whom, but all agreed that given the severity of the winds, it could have been much, much worse.

There WAS a tremendous amount of cooperation. Numerous folks whose boats were not in the line of fire in the bowling alley, jumped in their dinghies and (my opinion) heroically helped others. They boarded the shorthanded boats and helped raise anchors to relocate and re-anchor, helped untangle twisted metal and separate boats that had collided and generally helped bring order back to the chaotic situation.

It turned out that the boat that was directly upwind of us that disappeared in the early going, had broken loose from their spot and was spinning in 360 degree circles out of control (as it was described to me the next day by three different people who saw them) and hit two other boats directly downwind of us. I have no idea how we escaped that one as we were anchored directly in the line that they had to have taken. I am very thankful that we did.

For our part, I’m glad I made the choice to completely reset the anchor when it wasn’t perfect the first time even though it seemed “good enough”. It’s really a lesson I have to be reminded of time and again that even though conditions may be completely benign, things change very fast. They rarely change when you expect them to and more often than not change so fast you literally have zero time to react. It’s either right or wrong and you sort it out later. We also stayed on “anchor watch” for much of the rest of the night as there were additional squalls, a couple of which required me to put Charisma in reverse to avoid a neighbor. I’m hoping for more sleep tonight.

When a VHF request went out today asking what was the actual wind speed observed last night ( a response of 40.8 sustained was the record) the best response was from the Kiwi who said, “We call that wind that blows the dog off the chain in New Zealand!”

Moorea Rendezvous -GAME ON!

The fearsome women's paddling team (Ann on the left)

Woman's team in action

The men's team...

Heading off to war...

Ann celebrating, um, finishing...

First, before I share about the day let me tell you about last night. As we posted last night several boats in the anchorage were having issues with their anchors holding. Twice during dinner at Gato Go last night, Bob and I excused ourselves jumped into the dinghy (really an amazing feat as I did not fall in the water doing this) and hurried over to boats about to crash into Charisma to make sure their skippers were attempting to change their holding. Fortunately both were and Charisma made it through the night unscathed. Upon returning to Gato Go we found that a boat in front of them had dragged anchor and was about 10 yards off their bow. Very disconcerting in the dark. Again, the skipper jumped to it and reset their anchor. Another boat to their port side was all over the place. Not a comforting atmosphere.

Our writer friend, Sarah, noted that the only time she had seen extreme reactions from sailors was during their anchoring. Now she knows why. Crazy, shifting winds and your home is under attack! When we got up this morning, to our surprise, Gato Go was gato gone! Apparently THEY had dragged anchor early in the AM and moved to a different spot in the anchorage. Fortunately Charisma held firm all night long.

But back to the fun and games!

Update – Ann’s canoeing team’s name was Tiare Tahita – which means flower of Tahiti. Vicky, from Inspiration at Sea, came ashore with “tattoos” for all of us! Really it was a shirt with interesting sleeves that had a skin colored background with tigers on it. Vicky brought us all parts of it and we did look like we had fierce tattoos, which must have inspired our fierce attitudes. We, Vicky, Rani, Barbara and I, proceeded to try to intimidate all other teams and claim victory before the races began. Unfortunately our tactic did not quite work. We were fearsome; everyone wanted to take our pictures but we did not win our heat. In fact I think we lost our heat. But not by much. And Nui, our forward Polynesian, was very entertained by our spirit and our chanting and thought we should have won. (We have developed many reasons as to why we lost but I will refrain from boring you.)

So when Bob’s team, the Bilge Rats, participated, we were hopeful for a victory. Unfortunately, weight seems to have been an issue. Nui pre-warned them that there was a lot of weight in the canoe. And they lost. Oh well. Fun to be in an outrigger and fun to participate! Who cares who won if we didn’t.

The day also included demonstrations on how to tie pareas, the favored attire for men and women in the South Pacific. (A parea is simply a piece of brightly colored cloth that wraps around the body.) The demonstrations were hysterical and not only included Bob, displaying a very stylish top and bottom outfit (where were these guys when I was making his mermaid top?) but a very funny demonstration on how men can wear them also. Our favorite Japanese cruiser was a great model that the big Tahitian physically picked up and turned around so we could see both sides of the outfit. Very funny!

The day also included traditional foot races including a bamboo stick with bananas on either end like weights. I joined Bob’s rowing team to make the required team of five. Running through the palm trees and handing off the bananas to the next teammate, we were holding our own. On the final leg I think we would have won but were disqualified when Bruce from Gato Go decided that he could launch our bananas across the finish line. Good try but no banana.

Additionally there were coconut husking contests and a tug a war contest. Arts and crafts were available too as the locals taught us to weave palm fronds and dye pareas. And know that I know so many ways to wear my newly dyed parea Bob should be entertained for a long time!

The day ended with Bob rescuing Orcinius’ runaway kayak! He was standing there talking with Sarah, the writer, when he noticed a kayak floating sideways across the sunset, with NO rider! Quick reactions and a loud whistle caught the attention of a departing dinghy who assisted in capturing the escaped dinghy! After that, we towed back to their boat for the night!

Thank goodness for a relaxing evening back on Charisma, “paddled out” but with lots of great memories of silly times and Tahitian traditions!

Moorea

Crossing the finish line with "C'est la Vie" and "Buena Vista". Moorea in the background

Anchored Moorea. Buena Vista in the background.

 

Charisma happily anchored in Moorea.

Had a great sail over from Papeete, Tahiti to Moorea. 20-25 knots and 6 foot seas made for a fast passage. Since it was a “sorta race” we had more sail up than if we were cruising. We saw speeds in the sevens and eights.

Notable about today was a passenger! One Sarah Rose, a freelance writer who is doing a story on one of the boats in the fleet. Since the boat wasn’t here (she’s meeting them in the Tuamotus-no names until the story is published), she was doing background for the story. She is a delightful person and Ann and I thoroughly enjoyed sailing with her today. She’s spending the weekend with everyone here on the Puddle Jump Rendezvous to get the flavor of cruising in the South Pacific. Best of luck Sarah, we know the story will be great!

Once here and anchored, we all went in to the beach for a cocktail party. A “meet and greet” to get the weekend started off, since many of us haven’t seen each other for some months now as we’ve been cruising through many thousands of miles of ocean and islands. Tomorrow is a traditional Polynesian lunch and games including the infamous 6 person canoe race. Two experienced Polynesian paddlers and four very inexperienced cruisers will compete for….something. I’m not sure what. Maybe just bragging rights which would be fine since that gives us something to talk about for the next six months as we sail on westward. My canoe team is the Bilge Rats. Ann is on, well we’ll have to tell you tomorrow as it’s a Polynesian name and she can’t pronounce or spell it tonight.

So, hopefully tomorrow will bring a new post about victory! If not, that’s OK because it’s amazingly beautiful here and we’re going to stay a few more days after the festivities end tomorrow.

Oh, and the wind screeching through the rigging just reminded me: this looks to be a wild and maybe somewhat sleepless night. There’s a storm coming through. We can see lightning offshore and the wind is gusting fiercely with a hint of the rain to come. The breezy weather and 60ish boats in this anchorage are already causing some havoc. Several boats have had to re-anchor in the dark as they anchored too close to someone else in the first place. I expect it will get worse as someone is almost sure to drag anchor and run down though the fleet of boats. I hope that boat is not us. I’ve set the anchor alarm even though I know it will wake me at least twice tonight with a false alarm. Ahhh, the cruising life. Today an Aussie told me the key to cruising: “Don’t wreck your house”.

Ready For Moorea

The quay in Papeete downtown

The market downtown

A pretty quiet day. Ann did laundry and then we walked downtown to the Ace Hardware (we always need parts of some kind) and then the local equivalent to West Marine ( we always…,well you get the idea). The Latitude 38/Polynesian Tourist Board put on a party prior to tomorrow’s boat rally/race over to Moorea for the weekend. There will be more parties there this weekend and a Polynesian sports day that includes an outrigger race. I’ve already been recruited to “team big guys”. If we don’t sink, we’re gonna win. Hey that should be our motto! The party was fun. We got to see folks that we’ve only been hearing over the radio for the last three months or so. There was also a blessing of the fleet by a local Chief as well as male and female Hula dancing to music provided by a 20 piece drum and ukelele band. Unfortunately there was also boat captain hula dancing which meant I and the other skippers had to take off our shirts and shoes and dance the hula. The best part of this was getting a kiss from one of the Hulu dancers and a lei. Now I was official. But I don’t think they are going to invite me to be in their dance troupe. And my feet hurt from the pounding. Ann said I did OK though.

So, tomorrow we set sail at 0930 for Moorea. It’s all of about 12 miles, so shouldn’t take too long before we’re anchored in one of Polynesia’s most idyllic bays. Then (drum roll Sue), next week we’ll be back in Papeete and will have time to upload pictures and perhaps I’ll be able to put together a video of our adventure swim with the sharks.

But for now, I’ve got to go rest my feet. They’re killing me and I have to be ready for the big guys paddle event on Sunday. It may become Epic enough to make the pages of Latitude 38 later this summer (Andy took pictures of our tattoos, so they might be in there as well.

Stayed tuned.

A Passage Story

Fakarava, South Pass to Papeete, Tahiti.  240 Nautical Miles

I dreamed we were following a crazed Australian through the reef into Papeete and found there was no path through the reef.  The dream was so vivid, it was almost a hallucination.

Ann was on watch as we were nearing Papeete.  It was still blowing about 20 gusting to 25 and I finally found some sleep after 50 some hours.  Fortunately I was able to get five hours or so during this period as we were closing with Tahiti.  But, the dream was so real, I had to get up and look at the GPS (for the umpteenth time) to make sure there really was no reef until just before the island.  Wow.  Sleep deprivation and a little anxiety from the bumpy ride and squally weather. Crazy what too much coffee can do to your sleep patterns!

Right now we’re tied onto the quay in downtown Papeete.  It’s a med-moor type of thing where our stern is tied to a mooring and the bow tied to a floating dock.  Actually a “backwards” med tie, but the same principle.  To get off the boat, we have to go out over the bowsprit, wait for the boat to surge forward a bit and then one foot steps off onto the dock followed by the other when we’re sure it’s OK to let go of the headstay.  A very tricky
maneuver and one that when anyone does it along the quay, everyone watches to see if they “make it” or fall into the water!

My “welcome” to the mooring was a jammed mooring line around the back of the rudder.  The first line handed to us from folks on the dock was the “wrong” one and we had to let it go in order to get the right one.
Unfortunately, this jammed the wrong one into the top of the rudder.  I noticed the problem (fortunately as it would have been a very BIG problem had we started the engine and sucked the whole thing into the prop).
We tried boat hooks, but no go. Nothing to do but put on dive gear and over the side.  It only took a quick move to get it all untied, but not fun to have to dive on the boat in a commercial port.  I very quickly washed down with a convenient hose of fresh water on the quay.

So, what was it like getting here:

0300 on the first night out: I’m watching a perfect night sky. Shooting stars are streaking across the sky.  The Southern Cross is outlined against the Milky Way.  I’m listing to Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young on the iPod (to keep awake).  These are familiar songs I’ve heard a hundred times before over the decades, but have such new meaning sitting under the stars on a passage like this, just two days out of Papeete.  Papeete for goodness sake!!!  There’s a tremendous comfort in the lilting melodies and the perfectly blended harmonies of their voices.  “When you see the Southern Cross for the
first time, you understand now why you came this way…”

0430  Our course right now is a little south of west.  Our wake is leaving a faint outline against the black night sea, tracing our journey directly back toward the barely glowing but increasing lightening of the early morning sky that promises a new day.

The only problem with this picture is the new day ended up bringing squall after squall after squall.
Day two of our passage was not much fun, hence the lack of sleep (and overall crankiness of the skipper).  We got nothing but bumpy seas, windy gusts and at one point a wave breaking into the cockpit and soaking everything (including above mentioned skipper).

OK, but we’re in paradise, so who cares.  We’re in Tahiti!  For now that means we’re med-moored in the heart of the city with people and cars only 30 yards away.  Oh well, it’s kind of fun, for now.   Day after tomorrow we move out to Moorea on a group trip for some fun (probably 30 or more boats who have done this passage

this year).  That lasts through Sunday, then we’ll come back to Papeete and explore the area a bit more before moving on to Bora Bora and parts west.

Please stay with us to hear and see more.  I’m hoping to upload pictures of the last month or so, next week.  Stay tuned…