La Orana!
On Thursday we celebrated our first anniversary of arriving
in French Polynesia. Little did we know then
that a year on we would still be in the Society Islands.
|
 | | Sunset in Huahine |
|
 | | New viewpoint in Taha'a |
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We arrived with far more grandiose plans but
one thing this past 12 months have taught me is that “gentle” cruising, as
skipper calls it, has a lot to commend it.
At first the choice was not ours to make. Papillon was simply not ocean worthy, and all
our efforts had to be focussed on making that happen. When we finally had sufficient solar power, a
functioning water maker and the means to freeze months’ worth of food on board
then decisions had to be made. Did we
want to move on immediately or did we want to explore the Society Islands more
extensively? I naturally gravitate towards “ticking off” cruising. New anchorages provide thrill and fear in
equal measure and are exciting. Fiji
beckoned but we would have to go immediately as cyclone season over there is a
serious concern. Cruisers either have to
leave by November or face the cost of a haul out in a “cyclone resistant” boatyard
for months. Neither option was attractive,
and I was persuaded to slow down. The
trans-Pacific cruisers often spend less than 3 months in French Polynesia, an area
approximately the size of Europe. By the
time they get to the Society Islands after brief layovers in the Marquesas and Tuamotu
archipelagos their thoughts have already shifted to Fiji, and they barely
manage a stop in Raiatea and Bora Bora before they are off again. We have done it very differently exploring
each of the 7 main islands at a slow pace gradually building up an archive of
our favourite anchorages, walks, snorkelling waters and eateries. It has been gentle cruising at its best. The familiarity of favourite anchorages offset
by the ever-changing weather conditions and activities available ashore. Never was this so apparent as last week
when our when our first and long anticipated visitors of 2024 arrived.
|
 | | First night on board with the Stewarts |
|
 | | Monica takes the helm! |
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The nerves were jangling the week before. The weather had been shocking but added to
that uncertainty everything on the boat
seemed to be breaking at the same time.
As fast as we fixed a problem something else went wrong. The last straw was our previously reliable
windlass which refused to engage the anchor as we were attempting to drop the
hook in Huahine after a very bumpy 6 hour crossing. A pickup buoy further south in the lagoon was
the solution and a work-around was fashioned but it was a close call. By
definition, any boat job demands the use of every tool available on board and this one was no different. After
a few hours the boat was in complete disarray, and we were frazzled. It seemed like we would never be ready but of
course we were and with the workaround functioning like clockwork we were able
to enjoy a wonderful 6 days with Monica and Graeme revisiting some of our favourite old haunts. The weather was not always kind,
but each experience was different. A walk
we had done in Huahine in sunshine with Mairi and Rob was repeated in steady rain,
another on Taha’a was unrecognisable after a major landslide and a final one on
one of my favourite motus found me disturbing a hornet’s nest and running for
relief into the sea. That certainly hadn’t happened before!
|
 | | Wreath and coral offerings at the Marae |
|
 | | Leaving Papillon on the reef |
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|
 | | Walk in Raiatea |
|
 | | Orchids on "Hornet's Nest" motu |
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The weather veered
from virtual calm to steady winds. Their
first ocean passage had to be helped along with the motors. No life jackets or seasickness pills required
only lazy lolling about in the trampoline for 5 hours and lots of cups of
tea. The second was much brisker. We raced down the west side of Raiatea in
steady winds of 20-25 knots - a fantastic introduction to catamaran sailing and
completely different from the day before. Eating out was slightly thwarted by
the extended Christmas closures of many places and the complete disappearance
of others, but we did manage a fantastic night out at Opoa Beach Hotel. Good food and dancing to entertain and the
wettest dinghy ride of our lives back to Papillon when it was all over. We can
never tire of that place even when we do get home absolutely soaked! Wildlife
was plentiful but distinct from previous trips.
Dolphins jumped in the passes, turtles surfaced, rays leapt out of the
water and baby black tip sharks gathered in coral pools. Snorkelling in Taha’a,
usually so reliable was hampered by fierce currents. Avoiding the coral became the primary
objective, any additional fish sightings an added extra. How does one predict when the currents are
running strongly? We certainly got it wrong that day. The GoPro was redundant until the end when we
could finally lounge around in the shallows filming the fish grazing the last
clumps of coral in glorious sunshine. Everything
we did with our visitors felt different and yet strangely familiar - we loved having them aboard.
|
 | | Baby black tip sharks at our feet |
|
 | | Exploring the Motu |
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|
 | | Walking in Taha'a |
|
 | | Out at the reef |
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But now they are gone, and we need to make plans for what
next. First things first though are the more pressing matters of the day: endless clothes washings, shopping to replenish
the freezers, diesel tanks to fill and the water maker to run. It’s all exciting stuff on a boat you
know. By Thursday we were exhausted. Our normal pattern is to avoid alcohol Monday
to Thursday, but this was our one-year anniversary after all, and it seemed
worth celebrating! We took a dinghy ride
into town and visited the new wine shop that has just opened. Emerging with a chilled bottle of white we
enjoyed a lovely sunset back on board with skipper’s best shark steaks on the menu. Reflecting on last year it seemed we had come
a long way. Back then on our first night
in French Polynesia all we could find to buy in Champion were some stuffed pasta shells and a box of unrecognisable
tea bags. A year on everything feels
much more familiar. We still have to
figure out what’s next for us but we will leave that for tomorrow. Today this gentle cruising malarky has a lot
to commend it!
|
 | | Sunset back in Uturoa |
|
 | | Papillon from the plane (middle row second from the front!) |
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A belated happy New Year. All I can say is WOW, fab singing and pics. I celebrated NY with a very different kind of swim at Trallee Bay , Oban. I thought of you (briefly) as I shivered on the beach.
ReplyDeleteWe had a blast, was so good to visit and experience life on board Papillon. So many wonderful memories (forget hornets and snorkelling graze 😂) treasured forever 🥰 Island time is definitely the right style to adopt, what’s the rush? You and Malcolm run a tight ship so glad to have been part of it, if only for a short time. Happy cruising over next few months,
ReplyDeletemany thanks again, Monica and Graeme xx xx
Lovely reading this time, so interesting to read about the awful weather, thought the sun shines all the time! Have a nice time, leisurely cruising sounds like the best idea!
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