It is 0230 in the morning, I am on watch and we are sailing
from Tahuata to NukuHiva.
We are proceeding at 6 knots and are passing on our port side Ua Pou – what great names!
I am sitting in my shorts with no shirt, having hardly worn a shirt or shoes
for the last 2.5 months. Our 17 day Pacific crossing ended at Hiva Oa 3 days ago; we are at the Marquesa
Islands. Hiva Oa
and Tahuata are stunning and I have high hopes for
Nuku Hiva which has one of the world’s highest waterfalls, which we will
trek up to. On our Port side about 1 mile away is A Plus 2 and on the starboard
side about 2 miles away Makena; both boats on the
World Arc.
We left Tahuata at 1800 having had
lunch on Makena with fish caught by Steve (a Marquesan with an unspellable and
un-pronounceable name). Steve, about 35, lives by himself in Hanamoenoa Bay. He has one solar panel for light and a
mobile phone, otherwise no modern amenities. He grows fruit vegetables and
catches fish, wild goats and pigs – nature is bountiful here.
Unfortunately when I first came across him when we arrived I got off to a bad
start. I swam ashore and waved to him, but as I only got a small response I
moved on – I offended him by not going up to him and shaking his
hand. When I was next on the beach two
days later he approached again and after chatting for a while he said
‘why did you swim away without saying hello?’ Now I know if you land on someone’s
beach you must go up and introduce yourself, not just wave.
The Pacific passage was largely uneventful with the main
surprise being the fickleness of the wind; it was frequently backing and
veering 20 degrees, which made for lots of course adjustments. In addition there was not enough of it. Despite crossing the lines ahead off the
other monohulls, we motored more than many (Juno
prefers strong winds) and so are not expecting a great result on this leg. The boat that won last time can arrive five
days after us and still be ahead on corrected time. For me the days sped by
with my time being spent on watch, cooking, reading, learning Spanish,
listening to Desert Island Disks and watching stars, sun rises and sun sets and
sleeping in numerous short bursts; normally having 2 or 3 sleeps a day. I tried
to helm for an hour a day.
Back to the wonderful names; we have now visited Rodney Bay,
Santa Marta, Miriadiadup, Banedup,
Sugardup (San Blas Islands); Shelter Bay, Panama City,
Isla Chapera, Isla Contadora
(Las Perlas Islands), San Cristobal, Isabella, Santa
Cruz (Galapagos), HivaOa, Tahuata,
NukuHiva (Marquesas Islands) with many more lovely
names to come! On HivaOa the highlight was a 2 hour
horse ride up in the hills with glorious views of valleys, mountains and the
sea; we rode lovely Marquesan stallions who are like
mini thoroughbreds and are very fiery with each other so we had a strict rule
to keep well apart. We went up and down
steep hills, galloped for a km and generally had a wonderful ride through
beautiful tropical forests; capped by our guide Paco
who was bare chested and rode in front hacking the
foliage with his machete- the girls loved him!
And I have to mention the Galapagos which lived up to all
expectations. We were there for 10 days
and visited 3 islands, our favourite being Isabella. The wild life is incredible –
everywhere you look – we had Pelicans fishing around Juno (big sploshes as they dive in), sea lions trying to board her,
sharks and fish all around. Just going ashore involved avoiding multiple large
black iguanas who don’t care about humans. The snorkelling was great
including swimming with giant turtles, Hammerhead shark and Manta and Eagle
rays – by the way we learned that big rays can lasso sharks (and humans)
and drag them to the bottom and by holding them still, drown them.
Everyday seems to be an adventure of some sort; some chore
related like spending hours diving to find our errant kedge anchor or cleaning
the bottom of the boat; others more tourist related such as today when Caroline
and I got up at 0615 to go to the fish market where we bought 12 kilos of
yellow fin tuna, swordfish and red snapper all for £30. We gave some to other
boats but most has been frozen for our next voyage. The amazing bit was the
fisherman cutting up the fish and throwing the waste into the sea where there
was a frenzy of sharks fighting for the scraps.
In fact when we processed our fish and threw away the scraps we had our
own show over the side of Juno. We have got used to swimming with sharks and
seeing fins passing the boat, most are less than 2 metres and are no threat to
us.
So another month has passed and I will soon have been away
for three months with the prospect of J arriving on the 23rd
April. I can’t imagine what it
will be like from here on; we have no voyages of more than 1,000 miles with
masses of Islands to visit. The next one
that is in my mind is Fakarava on the Tuamotos which everyone says is fantastic; but before that
we have the bay of virgins which used to be called the bay of penises until the
missionaries got involved (In French, Vierge and
Verge). But we have already seen the most stunning places so it does not seem
possible for things to get better. Tomorrow we go on a 2 hour hike following a
river up to a waterfall, supposedly the world’s third highest; the only
hazard should be the mosquitoes that carry a nasty disease and the No Nos that give a nasty bite!
I am fortunate indeed to be able to participate in this
voyage – thank you to J and Paul and Caroline! Until next time, adieu.
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