Saturday, 18 July 2015

French Polynesia - Society Islands

06-07-15 Monday
1030 Depart Tuherahera, Tikehau
Engine 1654.2 hours
1145 Successfully went through the passe. It was low tide with current still going out.
Wind 20 knots ESE
COG: 180 deg M, SOG: 5 knots

07-07-15 Tuesday
The wind steadily decreased as Sadiqi sailed south. By sunrise the the winds were 12 knots NE.
COG: 200 deg M, SOG: 5 knots.
Sailing with almost full mainsail, yankee jib and staysail.
Noon 1200 UTC -10 hours
Wind 12 knots (T) ENE
Lat: 16 41.92 S, Lon: 149 15.49 W
COG: 190 deg M, SOG: 5 knots
Engine: 1656.1 hours
116 miles since leaving Tikehau atoll.
With the wind on the beam it was a very pleasant sail.
By mid afternoon the winds were less than 8 knots from the east. I could see the high island if Tahiti and Moorea from 40 miles away.
1700 Beer o clock.
Wind less than 5 knots from the east – drifting.
COG: 185 deg M, SOG: 1 knot – sometimes.
12 hours to sail 30 miles to Papeete, Tahiti to arrive after sunrise.

08-07-15 Wednesday
Very little wind overnight – drifting toward Papeete.

0900 Arrived marina Taina, Tahiti
Engine: 1659.2 hours
I called up “Fair Winds” Sherman and Judy on the VHF radio, they were just about to leave the marina for Moorea. I picked up the mooring ball (C4) that they had used.

Marina Taina is a large, impressive marina with a good number of very large super yachts. There are several restaurants and marine service facilities on the premise. The mooring ball for Sadiqi cost around $50/week dependent on boat length. 
Sunset over Moorea from Taina anchorage
Since leaving Ecuador, some 3 months ago, I have been bereft of news. It would appear I did not miss much – there did not seem to have been much good news anyway. Papeete, Tahiti is the first real, sort of, civilised place I have been since leaving Panama. Well, if you can call seeing a Macdonalds fast food outlet nearby civilised. I took a walk near the marina to find an ATM to get cash. There was a large Carrefour supermarket within easy walking distance from the marina.
I had to resurrect the Mercury outboard that had not been used since leaving Panama in January. I had rowed everywhere since then. The only reason I used it was to ferry water, fuel, and supplies to Sadiqi. Tahiti is also a good place to get marine parts in the event of breakages.
I serviced the Volvo Penta and rebuilt the water pump – new shaft, bearings and seals.
I asked about getting anchor chain re-galvanised. Michelle from Tahiti Yacht chandlery advised that there was not such service in French Ploynesia. He had 8mm G40 chain, made in Italy, available at a reasonable price around $6/metre.

I purchased 32 metres of 8mm G40 High Test galvanised chain from Tahiti Yacht Chadlery.
On Sunday I did some work on the outboard engine then walked 8.5 kilometres into Papeete and back. Most places in town were closed on Sunday.
Tuesday July 14 was French Bastille Day – called something else here in French Polynesia. My quiet protest for the French ever even considering nuking the Tuamoto atoll of Mururoa was to work on the boat. I spliced the anchor rode onto the new anchor chain. The old chain was still in pretty good condition – just surface rust where the chain had dragged over rocks. I washed the salt off the chain and will get it re galvanised when I find somewhere that does it. Lugging 50 Kgs of anchor chain around was no fun. The easy way, as I saw on the dock, was to pay someone else to do the work.


Anchor rode to chain splice
I'd asked Michelle at the chandlery how to get a gas fill. He was very helpful. The easy way, as long as the tanks are less than 10 years old, was drop the tank off at the Mobile fuel station nearby. The “other” way was to buy a French Butane connection and modify it to enable an Australian POL fitted tank to be filled. Again, Michelle helped me. He lent me a trolley to cart the empty French Butane tank to the Mobile station so I could exchange it for a full one (10Kg about $30). Michelle let me fill my aussie 3.3Kg tank in his workshop. This takes hours if you don't want to waste gas by using the fast fill (bleed) option.
All to soon it was time to move on.


21-07-15 Tuesday
0805 Depart Marina Taina, Papeete. Tahiti
Engine 1661.7 hours
It was a short pleasant sail, once out of the lee of Tahiti, in 15 to 20 knot easterly winds.

1245 Arrive Opunoha Bay, Moorea
Engine 1663.8 hours

Opunoha Bay is the most beautiful, mostly natural bay, I have seen. I can't find words to describe it and photographs just don't do it justice. The scenery is mesmerising. I spent hours each day distracted by the view and the changing colours. I met up with Tom and Jan on “Ambler” who had anchored, with a stern line tied to a palm tree. The same place they had anchored some 30 years before. They said it had changed very little. Most mornings I would gaze at the steep cliffs to the west as the sunlight painted away the shadows of the massif to the east with rich vibrant and vivid colours, mostly green.
Opunoha bay, Moorea - looking east


Opunoha bay, Moorea - looking west
Opunoha bay, Moorea - looking south
On Sunday I walked to the Belvedere View spot. This is about 6 Ks from where the dingy was parked. Several processions of quad bikes with tourists from the resorts past me on the road. I had been given directions by one of the very friendly locals to go to the Three Coconuts pass. This was about another 6 ks further and at an elevation of 358 metres or around a thousand feet. The pass presented spectacular views to the south of Moorea and of Cook and Opunoha bays. After 5 hours of walking and admiring the the amazing views I arrived back at Sadiqi exhausted.


It started to get a little crowded in the bay when the super yacht "Vava II" turned up, all 100 metres of it, reputably worth US$100 million with its own helicopter. The cruise ship Paul Gauguin anchored near the bay entrance. Another beautiful, large, 5 spreader sailing yacht also turned up. It is a truly beautiful bay and surprisingly not crowded. I had seen a maximum of 5 yachts, the nearest yacht to me was about 100 metres away. Most yachts, about 40, anchor near the entrance to the bay on the east side near restaurants, shops etc. Granted the water is clearer there as opposed to where Sadiqi was at the bottom of Opunoha bay.
I reacquainted myself with some gardening chores by offering to mow the lawn of the hospitable family I'd had lunch with. I'm thankfully cured of gardening for another few years.
The clock is ticking. I decided to start the “advance notice of arrival” formalities that some countries require, as I had good Internet access in the bay. This is a 6 page document that for some countries require photographs of the skipper and boat, it has to be emailed or faxed at least 48 hours prior to arrival. I'll leave it at that – the less said about bureaucratic processes and procedures the better.

01-08-15 Saturday
0715 Depart Opunoha bay, Moorea
Engine 1664.8 hours

The forecast was for up to 15 knots wind later in the day. There was very little wind to start with. Sadiqi motored north west under brooding grey clouds. The South Pacific Convergence Zone (SPCZ) was making its presence felt.

Noon 1200 UTC -10 hours
Wind not much from the south
Lat: 17 17.94 S, Lon: 150 07.19 W
COG: 290 deg M, SOG: 4 knots
Engine: 1668.9 hours
20 miles since leaving Moorea.
Sadiqi chugging along under motor with mainsail up.

02-08-15 Sunday

0110 Sadiqi passed to the north of Huahine
Wind 14 – 16 knots SE.
COG: 270 deg M, SOG 5.5 knots.
It was good to be sailing again and give the old engine a break.

1200 Arrived Bora Bora. Anchored west side of Toopua Motu.
Engine: 1685.2 Hours (Way too much motoring)

It was a beautiful anchorage with incredibly clean turquoise water. It rained the whole afternoon. The water tanks were filled. I gave Sadiqi's decks and myself a good scrub in the rain. 
Bora Bora, Tapu Moto
During the night I noticed that the fridge seemed to running for excessively long periods. The next morning I noticed that the batteries had discharged much lower than usual. The batteries were fully charged after having used the engine for so long. I saw that the fan that cools the condenser was not turning when the compressor was running. I had a horror thought of not having cold beer for beer o clock! I took the dinghy to the town of Vaitape to search for a 12 volt fan. Surprisingly, I managed to find a smaller version at a computer retail store. I returned to Sadiqi and adapted the fan to fit the condenser. The next morning the fridge was cold, as was the beer, all was good. 
Bora Bora
I changed the mainsail as the luff tape was worn and the sail becoming very stretched. The older sail was in far better shape and better made.


I motored around to where Tom and Jan on “Ambler” were and picked up a mooring. In the evening I joined them for dinner at Bloody Mary's, a restaurant having notoriety from the impressive list of famous patrons who have dined there. By French Polynesian standards it was a reasonably priced meal. The moorings are free to cruisers having lunch or dinner at the restaurant.
I went snorkelling with Tom. The visibility was excellent, there were many reef fish.
Sadiqi's skipper feeding the fish
Through Tom and Jan I met up with Doug and Joy on “Gambol” from the USA. Philip and Barbara on “Angela”, whom I had met in the Marquesas, picked up a mooring near by to have dinner at Bloody Mary's.

Tom and Jan left for American Samoa. I dropped the mooring and headed back to the west side of Toopua to anchor. I chickened out of visiting the east side of Bora Bora. The water is so clear in the lagoon that deep water looks shallow. Later in the afternoon I heard a voice say “Another small yacht”. I poked my head out of the companion way to see a small yellow hulled yacht motor past. I subsequently met Jan, from Germany, on his 28 foot “Pheobie”. He had sailed from Europe, down the Atlantic coast of South America,through the Beagle passage and onto Patagonia, then to French Polynesia. An admiral achievement even with the bravado of a 28 year old.
Bora Bora Lagoon

I met up with Michelle and Corin again on “Ganesh” from France. I had followed “Ganesh” out of Bahia Caraquez for the start of my Ecuador escapades back in March. I also met up with Barry and Sylvia on “Jolani”, a beautiful S&S yawl, from San Francisco.

Wednesday August 12, I took the dinghy into Viatape, Bora Bora to clear out of French Polynesia and do the last of the food shopping. I met up with Darren and Jodie on “Grattetoille” from Hood River, Oregan USA. They were heading to Christmas Island then to Hawaii before heading back home to the States.

Thursday – there was light winds from the north with scattered showers. I set about making the boat ready for the long sail westwards. I was anticipating another rough sail so secured and tied down heavy items. The wind was forecast to swing to the south and pick up to 15 knots in the late evening, the swell only about 1 metre.

Tuesday, 30 June 2015

French Polynesia - Tuamotu

23-06-15 Wednesday
0830 departed Anaho Bay, Nuku Hiva.
Engine: 1632.2 hours.
Sadiqi's anchorage had become very uncomfortable with a northerly swell wrapping into the bay.

The winds along the north of Nuku Hiva were 10 to 15 knots from the East. In the lee, west coast, of the large island the wind were from the north west then all over the place. The seas were rough and vile tossing Sadiqi around like a cork. The Volvo chugged away to get Sadiqi through the rough seas as quickly as possible.

Noon 1200 UTC -9.5
Oops, forgot to set the alarm for midday!

1335 Sadiqi eventually escaped the rough seas in the lee of Nuku Hiva.
Winds 18 to 20 knots ESE.
COG: 222 deg M, SOG: 5 knots.
1700 Beer o clock was observed with libations to absent family and friends.

24-06-15 Wednesday
It was a pleasant and uneventful sail through the night under a waxing crescent moon.

Noon 1200 UTC -9.5 hours
Wind 10 - 12 knots (T) ENE
Lat: 09 58.44 S, Lon: 141 36.53 W
COG: 225 deg M, SOG: 4 knots
Engine: 1635.2 hours
125 miles since noon the previous day.

25-06-15 Thursday
Slow sailing overnight dead downwind with poled out jib and single reefed main.
Wind 8 – 12 knots (T) NE
Sails flapping and banging with the uncomfortable seas. The skipper was wondering what had happened to the south east trade winds.

Noon 1200 UTC -9.5 hours
Wind 8 - 12 knots (T) ENE
Lat: 10 33.16 S, Lon: 143 11.35 W
COG: 225 deg M, SOG: 4 knots
Engine: 1635.6 hours
89 miles since noon the previous day.

1515 dark clouds and rain on the horizon.
Wind 10 – 12 knots (T) NNE.

26-06-15 Friday
The winds dropped to less than 10 knots early in the night. With sails flapping and banging Sadiqi was hardly making one knot. I started the engine, which rattled away for most of the dark hours.

0600 With relief I turned off the engine.
Winds 8 to 12 knots NE.
Sailing slowly downwind with poled out jib and single reefed main.
COG: 225 deg M, SOG: 3 knots (sometimes).

Noon 1200 UTC -9.5 hours
Wind 10 - 15 knots (T) ENE
Lat: 11 27.79 S, Lon: 144 32.91 W
COG: 225 deg M, SOG: 4.5 knots
Engine: 1647.9 hours
97 miles since noon the previous day.

27-06-15 Saturday
It was a pleasant, fast sail overnight.
Wind 10 to 16 knots (T) NE
COG: 215 deg M, SOG: 5.5 knots

Noon 1200 UTC -9.5 hours
Wind 10 - 15 knots (T) ENE
Lat: 12 52.09 S, Lon: 146 09.49 W
COG: 218 deg M, SOG: 5.5 knots
Engine: 1647.9 hours
126 miles since noon the previous day.

The wind eased after midday making for an uncomfortable, banging and flapping downwind sail in knarly seas/swell.

28-06-15 Sunday
It was a roly sail overnight with wind from behind – single reefed mainsail and poled out jib.
Wind: 8 to 12 knots (T) ENE

Noon 1200 UTC -9.5 hours
Wind 15 - 20 knots (T) NNE
Lat: 14 01.75 S, Lon: 147 40.98 W
COG: 205 deg M, SOG: 6 knots
Engine: 1648.4 hours
113 miles since noon the previous day.
The wind dropped to less than 10 knots shortly after noon.
I had planned on skipping the Tuamotu archipelago of French Polynesia and heading straight to Tahiti. However, I was going to pass close to the the most western atoll, but one, Tikehau around midnight. I decided to slow Sadiqi by reducing sail and visit Tikehau. The reason for skipping the low lying Tuamotu archipelago was the risks of entering atoll passes and the incidence of coral bommies once inside the atoll. I had sufficient information and the entry looked doable regardless of the tidal flow.
Sadiqi rolled from side to side, not so gently, slowly south west.
1700 - Beer o clock UTC -9.5
Change time zone to UTC -10 hours
1700 Beer o clock UTC -10 :)

29-06-15 Monday
A slow sail overnight with double reefed mainsail doing only 2 to 3 knots. This was planned to arrive at passe to Tikehau atoll around 1000. The cruising guides (Bonnette and Deschamps) advise to only navigate inside the atolls between 1000 and 1500 to be able to see the shallow coral heads.
Wind: 10 -15 knots ENE

1100 Entered Passe Tuheiava, Tikehau, Tuamotus.
Sadiqi's transit of the Tuheiava passe was uneventful. The pass is wide with fish traps on either side.

1130 Dropped anchor Teonai, Tikehau, Tuamotus
Engine: 1649.6 hours

Tikehau, Tuamotus
Sunset Tikehau, Tuamotus
The Teonai anchorage was small and sheltered by Teonia island to the west, a reef to the north and east on which were the remains of a resort. On the second day two local fishermen came by the boat and generously offered me a couple of fish. I gladly accepted one, filleted and cooked it that night for dinner. I was hoping that my lips would not go numb and I wouldn't start baying at the full moon with a bout of Ciguatera poisoning. The fish was excellent and to my knowledge I did not suffer any neurological disorders – no more than usual.

01-07-15 Wednesday
In the morning I downloaded the weather GRIB file using the SSB radio to check for wind – there was little forecast. I had planned to head to Tahiti that day. There was little point in rolling around in nasty seas with no wind. I decided to stay – not a hard decision given the location. I did, however, decide to motor 6 miles south to the main town on Tikehau atoll – Tuherahera. The navigation markers in French Polynesia are excellent. I arrived at Tuherahera and dropped anchor. I checked for WiFi Internet access so I could update the blog with pictures. It existed but was very slow. I had lunch and motored back to Teonai anchorage. Tuherahera looked far to civilised at with tourist resorts, airports and cars etc. The wind did not exceed 5 knots throughout the day. It was the most benign wind conditions I had experienced since leaving Ecuador.

After nearly 3 months since leaving Ecuador I still had Ecuadorian Pilsener beer. The first 3.3 Kg propane tank had only just run out – having lasted 3 months. I still had sufficient food on board for possibly another month. Sadiqi did appear to be riding higher in the water than when she left South America. It must have been the dwindling food stocks.

I checked the GRIB file the following day – there was going to be even less wind for the next few days. I set up camp putting up the awning on the boom for shade. I had not inflated the dinghy to go ashore and felt no need to. I went snorkelling in the afternoons. The visibility was no so great being only a few hundred metres from the passe into the atoll. It was a beautiful location with stunning sunrises and sunsets and an amazing full moon reflected over calm waters
Sunrise Tikehau, Tuamotus
Sunrise moonset Tikehau, Tuamotus
Tikehau, Tuamotus
Moonrise sunset Tikehau, Tuamotus
I read “The Happy Isles of Oceania” by Paul Theroux – a candid account of his travels, much of it in a collapsible kayak, around South Pacific islands in the 1990s. An entertaining and enlightening read.

The fishermen came past Sadiqi again and offered fish. I gladly took one and filleted it. I threw the carcass and bits over the side, which attracted about 6 large black tip sharks. Apparently, snorkelling or scuba diving in the passe was supposed to be very good – swimming among the sharks.

The wind forecast on the GRIB files was increasing with south east winds around 25 knots. This was considered a little excessive for a sail to Tahiti. Tikehau atoll is about 12 miles across, the passe and anchorage near Teonia island are on the west. This made for a potentially uncomfortable even dangerous fetch in strong winds. I sailed 6 miles south to the main village on Tikehau atoll – Tuherahera. It looked like my departure was going to delayed again. Saturday night the wind howled between 20 and 30 knots. Despite the protection from the island the waves still tossed Sadiqi like a cork making for an uncomfortable night. When at anchor or moored I usually sleep in the fore cabin. Sadiqi's bow was rising and falling a metre or so in the wave chop. In the fore cabin berth when the bow plunged I was rendered momentarily almost weightless. I had to retire to the saloon, where I sleep when under-way, with the lee clothes holding me onto the bunk. It is amazing that conditions can change so quickly from idyllic calm to dangerous rough.