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The Marquesas

October 31, 2019 by Carl Strange

The Tuamotus (#10)

20 July

Your Wasabe Wings sounds like something we’ll try when we reach somewhere with propane refills. We are being fairly conservative with our supply of propane since we don’t have French Poly. adaptors and don’t want to pay their outrageous prices. As a side note, it might be interesting to see just how much money the French government doles out to each individual islander. We balk at $3 for a small box of cookies – the locals walk out with handfuls. Few of them seem to have jobs – store clerks, post office employees, dump truck drivers. Lots of folks sitting, swimming, drinking, and generally enjoying life [Carl is talking about the locals and not the cruisers visiting the island].

Got to go. Another boat is due for smoked salmon and champagne in a few minutes. A celebration and thanks for the work they did to help us with the repairs. I need to be slicing limes and onions instead of typing.

8 August

We’re still in the Tuamotus anchored in tiny little Tahenea. This is a large lagoon with no distracting village and only one other boat to play with. The numerous grouper make it simple to get dinner so I should have plenty of time to write. We’ll linger here for a bit over a week then make the 250 or so miles to Tahiti. Looking forward to fresh vegetables and fruit after a steady diet of coconuts We are also looking forward to the big dance festival that happens next month.

12 August

I loaned one of my Mares Cyrano spear guns to a guy we’ve been buddy-boating with for several weeks. He is just learning to snorkel and hunt and is having a great time on the reefs. We split up for a few days to enjoy our individual islands at the lovely, unpopulated, Tahanea atoll in the Tuamotus. Today he told me, with a hang-dog expression, he had lost a spear. He’s especially embarrassed since he was doing something stupid – shooting a small shark off the back of his boat. Apparently, he hit the thing, it snapped at the line, bit it in two, and swam off with an embedded spear. He’s amazed he did something so silly since he couldn’t have dealt with the shark on board and had no idea what he was going to do with it anyway. Reminds me of hunting sparrows with my BB gun! Anyway, he has offered to buy me a new spear, once I find out the price for one.

20 August

Typical backyard in Ua-Pou
Hand-Woven Wall

We have enjoyed walking around the island. The people here all seemed to love landscaping with flowers and plants. The whole village was lovely. We passed out several packets of Impatient and Zinnia seeds to the delight of the recipients. Got gifts of bananas, pamplemouse and limes in exchange.

23 August

Throughout the islands, we found some huts with walls woven out of coconut palms. However, they are not really used in regular housing anymore but they make useful sheds and snack bar walls. We saw a few women and older children weaving mat fronds in an assembly fashion. The kids split the fronds and lay them out. The women smoked hand-rolled cigarettes, talked, and joked as they wove. It only took a few minutes to make each section. A useful process to know when you need a quick bit of shade or something clean to sit on around a beach fire. We still need a bit of practice to make them well.

24 August

Try to find two delightful stories – the creation myth of the Marquesas and the revenge of Mataheuna. You’ll know you’ve found the right myth if the story is about a man and a woman in a tropical setting. The woman asks the man to build her a house. He asks the gods for help and the process starts. The name of each island translates into part of the structure. I only remember Ua Pou as being the two beams supporting the structure.
The Mighty Spire Mataheuna was a young rock with a spire from one of the other Marquesan islands that traveled through the island groups smashing the lesser spires to the ground. He swore revenge, grew strong, smote all the other spires, and is regarded as the mightiest to this day.
These stores were told to us by a delightful young man who runs a tiny museum on Ua Pou. Many people have donated items for him to present. He changes his exhibits every three months or so and passes the stories and traditions along especially to the school children. He’s a great storyteller and we really enjoyed our time with him.

26 August

We left the peaceful harbors of Tuamotus to continue our explorations. One day out we hooked a 9-foot marlin. That is it measured 9 feet from head to tail and we didn’t include the spear shaped snout. Getting it onboard was a two-hour struggle.
I broke my favorite cleaver trying to cut steaks. Then I switched to a hack saw to cut through the spine but soon gave up on that. Finally, we spent a couple of more hours cutting it into fillets. We gave lots of fish away and I can’t count the number of ways we prepared it. Next time we’ll release anything over four feet or so.
 

Carl Strange Avatar
Carl and his wife Karen set-off on a journey around the world on-board their sailboat S/V Enchante. Along the way, they had a lot of adventures and in Aruba, a new member of their crew was born. Now a family of three with Rebecca’s birth, they sailed the Caribbean and the Pacific experiencing life along the way.

Filed Under: Pacific, Sailing, Travel Tagged With: Cruising, Enchante, S/V Enchante, Sailing, The Marquesas

October 24, 2019 by Carl Strange

"Bang" Repairs in the Tuamotus (#9)

30 June

Rebecca with her catch – a Mahi Mahi

Okay, okay, okay! I just checked the running “From the Log of…” and it has been a while since our last update. Just for your information, we arrived safely in Fatu Hiva and stayed for a few days. The morning winds, that blasted down the mountains, drove us away quicker than we would have liked. Since then we’ve checked in at Atuana, Hiva Oa, and spent a few nights anchored at isolated spots on Hiva Oa and Tahuata. We’re traveling in loose company with a British couple on S/V Hannakin.

The general plan in to be drift diving in the pass of Tuamotu island in a few days.

The locals have been very friendly in the small, outlying villages. The one larger town we visited wasn’t so gracious. Everyone has fruit growing in their front yards and we’ve had no trouble trading for limes, bananas, coconuts, and Pamplemousse. French baguettes are available, hot and fresh, at $.40 per loaf. Sadly, tomatoes, potatoes, cucumbers, onions, and other vegetables are harder to come by. The locals have a few farms up in the valleys but we haven’t stayed in one place long enough to work out a trade.

The man on S/V Hannakin was PADI certified in ’92 and hasn’t been diving since. He asked for a class so we’ll work our way through a quick refresher course and head for blue water.

I have managed my first dive in the South Pacific. A short visit to a pretty reef at 40 feet then an hour of scrubbing the bottom. Our brand new Jotun paint isn’t working well at all. Our paint is black. S/V Hannakin has been in the same conditions with Red Jotun and looks great. Our theory is so much pigment is added to make the paint black that the copper/tin additives end up very diluted.

We’re still moving frequently to get to the isolation of the Tuamotus in fairly short order. Still, I’ll make time to sit down and write another installment of “From the Log…”.

19 July

S/V Hannakin in a marina

I’m well aware that you haven’t received any updates lately but I have a much better excuse than “the dog ate it”.
Sailing south from Marquesas to Tuamotus we encountered a squall with 30-35 knots of wind. The seas and winds had been building slowly and we were a little slow on reducing sail. We had the headsail about halfway rolled up when we discovered a crack in the only swage fitting on the boat. I’m getting a little ahead of the story – we didn’t actually see the crack until a few days after the squall.

I was hauling away on the furling line and Karen was handling the sheets when there was a loud “Bang” forward. It took several seconds to realize the headsail was completely missing. The top head stay fitting had exploded and the partially rolled up headsail, roller furling system, and several yards of lines had gone over the side. We managed to drop the mainsail before wind pressure took the masts over the side as well. It took a couple of hours of hard work in squally weather to get the failed rigging back on deck and strapped down. Six miles of motoring into the squall took us to a protected bay in Oa Pou where we met our friends on S/V Hannakin.

We spent a couple of days licking our wounds and figuring out how to make temporary repairs. There was no chance of support from the local village since some of the women still knew how to make rope by weaving shredded coconut husks. After several days of exhausting repairs, we enjoyed sea trials on our new rig. Friday we’re stocking up with whatever fresh produce we can find in the local village and Saturday we’re heading towards the Tuamotus. More permanent repairs will be made in Tahiti and we’ll be replacing a lot of bent rigging in New Zealand. But at least we’re a sailboat again.
After the three or four-day sail to Tuamotus, we’ll rest for a day or two. Then I’ll sit down and catch up on our stories from the Marquesas.

All’s well onboard – sorta.

Carl Strange Avatar
Carl and his wife Karen set-off on a journey around the world on-board their sailboat S/V Enchante. Along the way, they had a lot of adventures and in Aruba, a new member of their crew was born. Now a family of three with Rebecca’s birth, they sailed the Caribbean and the Pacific experiencing life along the way.

Filed Under: Pacific, Sailing, Travel Tagged With: Cruising, Enchante, S/V Enchante, Sailing, The Marquesas, The Strange Chronicles

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