Palmerston

Palmerston Island

Palmerston Island Link

We had a decent crossing from Bora Bora to Palmerston except for one nasty storm. In the several years we have been sailing we have never been in a real storm, we just don’t like sailing in bad weather. We checked weather religiously before departing, but the day before we arrived at Palmerston we were hit by a nasty storm. I was on watch early in the morning and the wind shifted just enough to require me to trim the sails. By the time I finished with the sails the winds were building quickly. In the time it took for me to call for Tanya we were hit with 40 knot winds, it was like being hit by a train. There were no angry clouds, no rain, no big seas, we had breaks of blue sky and sun from time to time, but still…POW. In 40kt winds and building seas we wrestled the sails in and started watching the clock, assuring ourselves that this is just a squall, it will all be over in a few minutes!

squalls, they come on ya fast, then they leave ya fast”

Capt Ron

Within 30 minutes the seas doubled to eight feet, in another 30 minutes they increased to 10-12 feet and winds sustained 38 kts with gusts well above 40 kts. After about two hours of this we pretty much gave up on the squall theory. There was no picture taking during this but if you can imagine walls of water eight feet higher than the cockpit of your boat coming at you repeatedly for hours, it was a sight. After about three hours the winds began to drop down to the lower to mid 30s and the seas back down to about eight feet. Over the next 15 hours the storm slowly abated and the next day we made it safely to Palmerston.

Dea Latis took it all in stride. I never felt unsafe or terribly uncomfortable the entire time, I didn’t even get seasick, and we never took any huge waves into the cockpit. We skidded sideways down a couple of really big waves, buried the rail into the water, slammed into another wave, causing a huge tower of solid water to rise up and threaten, but it never came in the boat. I love our boat. The only thing that really bothered me was overlooking this weather. We are really diligent when it comes to trip planning, or so I thought.

There were two other boats in the general vicinity and we all ended up at Palmerston. We all went ashore together and our conversations and experiences regarding the weather were identical. Nobody saw that weather on any forecast, no obvious indications, no expectations, everything was identical. I don’t know if that is good or bad but it made me feel a tiny bit better. Anyway, that was an experience…that we don’t want to repeat!

On to Palmerston.

This is Palmerston Island:

 

Palmerston is a motu or island that is one part of an atoll in the Cook Islands, and it’s beautiful:

After a six day passage and one storm we were very tired. We arrived late in the day and were met by Edward and his son David. They directed us to a mooring and after we were secured, they welcomed us and gave a quick run down of what to expect the next day. They told us about the check in process, a tour of the island, and lunch, and if we needed anything to call on the VHF. We were quite happy to just collapse for the evening. The next day they ferried the officials to all three boats and after checking in we all went ashore:

…through these passes in the coral reef:

…inches from coral heads:

David was awesome, obviously having made this trip a thousand times:

Palmerston:

The water in the lagoon is so beautiful:

Shore side service!

The beach is wonderful:

Edward was our host for our stay so he led us across the island to his home where we met his family and completed a bit more paperwork. The island is so beautiful, it’s like a tropical movie set:

That hull and debris is from a sailboat that ran up on the reef in 2011:

…down the path:

…to Edward’s home:

They have a big sun shade made from the mast of the wrecked sailboat:

This is Arthur Neale, Executive Officer of Palmerston Island Administration, completing our paperwork:

After completing our check-in, Edward’s son David took us on a tour of the island. Palmerston is very well done, super clean and manicured, it is obvious they take great pride in their community:

I never expected to see street lights:

Arthur and the administration building:

Private homes:

Church and cemetery:

Main street looking west:

Main street looking east:

William Marsters settled Palmerston in 1863, this is his original home…probably not the original roof or electrical box on the front, but it’s the original structure from the 1800’s:

William Marsters Link

Beautiful Church:

Water supply:

Palms and ocean in the distance:

Private homes:

Solar powered internet service provider:

School with 11 students:

Solar power plant:

Continuing on with our tour:

Edward, his family in the background, getting ready to crack open lunch! Edward is also the Chief of Police:

Lunch was fantastic, chicken curry, rice and homemade bread:

After lunch we sat a bit, talked about storms, and heard about the history of Palmerston:

We are at the mercy of the weather and because of that we were only able to spend one day at Palmerston. I would have traded our time in Bora Bora to spend a few extra days here, it was wonderful! Edward and family, and Arthur, were some of the nicest people we have met in our entire Pacific crossing. I truly have to say our short visit to Palmerston has been the highlight for me. Heading back to the boat:

Afternoon view of Palmerston:

I wish I had wrote this immediately after our visit. Palmerston is an amazing and interesting place and the people are the best. I had read about Palmerston over the years and being such a remote place they often experience logistical delays and are grateful for anything people can bring. Before departing we were able to drop off lots of school supplies, basic food items, excess fishing gear and gasoline. We had been carrying those school supplies, specifically for Palmerston, since we left Florida so it was nice to get those off the boat.

The people of Palmerston are incredibly hospitable and generous. They invited us into their home, taxied us to/from our boat, gave us a tour of their island, fed us, and enlightened us on their history, and they never at any time asked us for anything in return. I was so glad I had read up on Palmerston years ago and was able to plan ahead for our visit.

I believe they had cleaned some fish earlier and threw the scraps to the sharks:

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Bora Bora Pearl Beach Resort and Spa

Bora Bora Pearl Beach Resort and Spa

Bora Bora Pearl Beach Resort and Spa

The weather during our time in Bora Bora was terrible (boo-hoo ha?) so we spent most of our time inside. We made reservations at the Pearl Beach Resort for dinner and a show which was fantastic! The resort is “WOW” and the people working there are great!

The resort was only a 20 minute dinghy ride across the lagoon and fortunately the wind and waves were behind us for the trip over:

The weather was awful, windy and overcast but fortunately no rain. The resort is beautiful:

Reception, where we had to register as dinner guests but were still treated as if we were staying at the resort:

We were early so they suggested we enjoy happy hour at the resort bar…ok!

After a couple of drinks we made our way over to the dining room:

I had never experienced a buffet like that, they had everything you can imagine and it was all displayed like art, and I was so impressed I only snapped a picture of the desserts…I had to put the phone away and focus!

We had a fantastic dinner and they put on a wonderful show as well:

…more to follow…

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Catching Up

We are in Fiji!

…but we have quite a bit of catching up to do on the website…so…

A few months ago we were in Moorea, anchored in Opunohu Bay. Moorea was amazing and probably one of my favorite stops in the Society Islands.

From Moorea we did an overnight run to Bora Bora but as you can see the wind died so we motored the last few miles:

Entering Bora Bora Lagoon, dolphins playing around the boat:

I had been reading amazing things about this restaurant called Bloody Mary’s for years so we made it our first stop. Dea Latis on a mooring, Bloody Mary’s dock in the distance:

Bloody Mary’s

Long dock over the reef to the restaurant:

…after years of reading about this place…

Dea Latis under the palm tree to the left of the dock…in the lagoon…in Bora Bora…in French Polynesia…and we sailed here…:

Oh yea, BAM:

Nice outdoor seating, if you prefer that:

Had to try the bloody mary at Bloody Mary’s, they’re great, and everything is two for one at happy hour! Yikes!

After a couple of drinks at the bar we moved to the dining room via the menu! This is the menu! All the food is displayed on this big illuminated ice filled table. The lady explains all the available dishes, how they are prepared, and the cost. Once you decide what you want, she takes your order and then a hostess takes you to your table. The food is amazing and they have something for every taste:

Fun night and the restaurant was everything we hoped it would be!

On the other side of that picture in the center is a five person local band banging out traditional Polynesian music! They were awesome!!

We also had dinner at the Bora Bora Yacht Club, sadly it did not live up to expectations but still a fun night. We kind of had to go there since we were on a mooring right in front…

This is the town harbor in Viatape:

Dea Latis moored in front of the Yacht Club, third sailboat from the right:

No trip to Bora Bora would be complete without having to remove and service the 75lb windlass:

The weather during our stay in Bora Bora was less than ideal, it rained off and on for about 9 of the 12 days we were there. When the weather was decent we made the best of it. We rented a scooter one day and drove around the island.

We found these 15th century petroglyphs which I believe are a tribute to royalty:

Bora Bora was a big US Navy base in world war 2 and there are several gun emplacements still here…up this hill:

About Bora Bora

Operation Bobcat

…all the way up for this?

Built 20 May 1942:

Nice view though:

That resort is the Bora Bora Pearl Beach Resort and Spa in the distance. We went to dinner and a show there one night:

Nice view…

About a 100 yards down from the remnants of the first gun emplacement:

What do you do with your time when you’re done building a gun emplacement on the 20th of May? Build another one four days later!

Ammunition bunker:

Seven inch naval gun:

We stopped at this amazing public beach also:

Had lunch at the beach:

The weather in Bora Bora was so crummy we spent the majority of our time indoors. So, we had such a great time at Bloody Mary’s we went back! The lady is explaining the menu to everyone. That is a cluster of lobsters in the center:

This band was amazing, the singer was really great, like American Idol runner up great:

Sand floor!

Did we mention this awesome band?

Beautiful scenery on one of the two good days we had here in Bora Bora:

We did manage to get out snorkeling a few times but it was either cloudy or rainy or too rough to really enjoy. We were snorkeling one day and found this 50 caliber shell casing on the bottom, evidently left over from WW2. I looked up the markings on the internet and it was made by Frankford Arsenal, Philadelphia Pennsylvania in 1941.

…a couple of random videos…

We were buzzed by the marine patrol leaving Moorea:

Canoe race in Bora Bora:

More to follow…

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We Are In…

Tonga!

Internet since Bora Bora is difficult to find and very expensive, mainly because we are off the beaten path. Also, pictures uploaded via mobile data seem to come out distorted so we are not adding anymore pics until we get good wifi.

…so just a quick update.

We left Bora Bora a few weeks ago and stopped briefly at Palmerston in the Cooks. Due to bad weather we had to move on after only one day, skip Niue altogether, and quickly move on to Tonga. Palmerston was definitely a highlight of our trip across the Pacific. I would have traded our time in Bora Bora for a few more days at Palmerston…what an amazing place!

We have been having a great time here in Niuatoputapu Tonga.

New-ya-tow-pu-ta-pu, is wonderful, beautiful, the people are fantastic. It took us a few days to get checked in but we are now legally in Tonga. After a six day passage we arrived late afternoon on a Tuesday. It was late so we anchored in the lagoon, cleaned up, had a nice dinner and got some proper sleep. The next morning we went to get checked in but everything was closed…because the King of Tonga was here! We asked the police if we could stay and see the king, they said no-problem! We had a great day, we got to see the king, watched the community presentation and headed back to the boat. Thursday we went in again to check in…everything is closed. We were hitching back to the wharf and got a ride with a very nice lady who turned out to be the customs officer! Long story short she apologized for the delay but they have been very busy with community events in the past few days. We got checked in the next day, took a walk across the island, and now we are stuck on the boat while a storm blows by. There are four boats here including us. They are from Germany, UK, and New Zealand, and there is at least one diver on each boat! We all went for a dive the other day out on the reef, it was amazing, probably the best dive I have done. It was a little overcast but the scenery was amazing, it was deep coral canyons winding around in different directions. Some of the canyons were 20-30 feet wide some were little more than shoulder width apart, just spectacular.

The weather is terrible right now, it actually started around midnight. This weather is no surprise, we have been watching it’s approach for days and it hit right on schedule. We are in a wonderful anchorage with excellent holding. We’re protected by the island and surrounding reef so we are good for now! Winds hit 44 kts last night, we held fast but a big catamaran in front of us dragged across the lagoon. I don’t know how they missed us or the boat next to us but they did. At 3:30 AM they were in front of us, at 06:00 they were behind us heading for the reef. I tried hailing them in VHF but no answer. Again, long story short they woke up and re-anchored. All is well.

Due to bad weather we have had to cut-short or change plans altogether. One stop we really don’t want to miss is Vava’u Tonga which is south of us. It looks like we may have a window to head south on Tuesday so that is the “plan”.

If we make it to Vava’u we will probably spend a week there, move onto Savusavu Fiji for a week or two and then onto New Caledonia. We will see what the weather allows us to do.

We will update when we have decent wifi…

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Stingrays and Sharks Moorea

Swimming with stingrays in Moorea.

While anchored in Opunohu Bay we took a side trip in the dinghy to “stingray city”. The local tour boats bring the hotel guests out to a shallow spot and feed the stingrays. The mobs of tourists stand in the shallows and feed the stingrays which of course attracts lots of stingrays, and more tourists, and sharks.

click pictures for full screen

The trip is about 2.5 miles one way from our anchorage to stingray city, along this well marked but shallow and very narrow channel:

The water is so clear:

North coast of Moorea:

The channel leads to this bay. This is looking back toward Opunohu Bay:

From that bay you travel along another small boat channel which in places is barely wide enough for two boats:

The channel leads to the Intercontinental Moorea Hotel. The channel actually ends about 50 feet from those bungalows. The guests must love the traffic:

A few hundred yards past the hotel is stingray city, we went early, there was only one other boat:

I threw some bits of fish skin in the water and in no time there were a dozen stingrays around the dinghy. I had to get in the water:

When they know you have food they get excited:

They calmed down after a while and I was able to take some nice video:

Tanya actually got in the water even with a few small sharks lurking around. Once the sharks started to tighten their circle she got back in the dinghy and took pics:

I don’t have a problem swimming with sharks around as long as they are smaller than me. Good or bad idea I don’t really care. However…these two sharks came out of nowhere and they were bigger than me, I would say at least six feet, maybe seven feet long. These are the largest sharks I have seen in person since the Bahamas. These two were in formation, moving with a purpose and began to circle at high speed, and that was enough for me to get out of the water. You will probably need to click on the pic to see them.

So we hung out a little while longer and watched from the dinghy. “Look another shark”:

The stingrays were awesome:

We took a ride a bit further west and then back east to the boat. By the time we circled back to the stingray area the tour boats had arrived:

Heading back, right in front of the bungalows at the Intercontinental:

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