Sawa-I-Lau and Vomo, Yasawas, Fiji

Author:  Pete
Location:  Sawa-I-Lau and Vomo, Yasawas, Fiji

 

Despite the overcast we were happy sailing north from the Blue Lagoon.  We had been there for about a week, waiting for an ugly spat of weather to clear so having the sails out an moving felt great.  Even caught a Bluefin Trevally on the way!

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Sawa-I-Lau is a high, limestone island in a cove just south of Yasawa Island, the northernmost of the island chain.  We pulled in, made friends with the locals in the village, and set about finding the treasure hidden on the island…

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The island is renowned for its caves.  A set of cracking cement stairs have been built into the rock up from the beach to the cavern entrance.  The first cavernous room has an open cathedral ceiling with the sun pouring in, lighting up the clear water.  A few fat eels basked in the glow and made us a touch hesitant to jump right in.  At the far end of the grotto, a few feet below the water gaped an huge swim-through to another cave.  Armed with goggles and fins, along with a memorized map of the cave system courtesy of our friends on another boat, Family Circus, we ducked under the water and swam into the black.  Since there was much natural light in the first cavern our underwater torches did little initially to punch through the black, but our eyes adjusted rapidly and the inverted image of the next room could be seen in the reflection of the placid water. 

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It was a short, easy swim-through and then we explored the next cavern in the green glow from the light oozing in through the underwater passage.  The cave is oddly shaped, but there’s no place to get lost.  The sheer walls are brown limestone that blazes brightly under a torch, even below water.  The bottom is black rock, so even though it’s only ten feet down in places, the light beam appears to be swallowed by the abyss.  In some places you could swim down and see the bottom.  A dive in other spots revealed no bottom at all.  The last room could only be accessed by a fairly long, underwater swim.  The passage through was hidden in the corner of the second chamber about six feet below the water surface.  It was mostly straight, about eight feet wide, then came to  a quick turn at the end.  No dead ends, no spurs off to get lost in, and smooth rock walls.  After the initial paralyzing fear of swimming into a black tunnel underwater, the passage was really beautiful, like flying at the top of a cathedral, albeit with eels popping up here and there.  It’s okay, they’re friendly, but it reaffirms Miranda’s hold as most courageous person I know.  The third cavern is completely cut off from outside light.  The place echoed like thunder when we popped up and cleared our snorkels.  It was even difficult to talk because of the reverberation.  The place was fantastical, with drippy salt stalactites and strangely organic architecture.  We braved the pathways into darkness again the next day just to be back in the middle of an aquatic Dr. Seuss illustration.  

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Stars filled the clear skies for a few calm nights, one of which we made a bonfire on the beach.  Nice to have a little connection to the terrestrial, to come back to the boat smoky and sandy.  It’s amazing how many consecutive days we go without touching land even though we’re island hopping.

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Tucked in a coral minefield between the Yasawas and Viti Levu is Vomo Island.  As we sailed east, the island’s protective reef could be seen shining bright yellow in the sun.  We weaseled our way in and dropped anchor in twenty feet of glittering sand.  We didn’t know anything about the place before we showed up and some exploring revealed incredible underwater topography. 

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The coral reefs were chest deep at the top and sixty feet deep one step away.  The vertical wall drew big and small fish alike and soft corals waved.  The water in the south here seems clearer than north in the Yasawas.  It made our deep free dives even more spectacular.  There’s a diver in the last two shots here.  Can you find them?

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Then it was back to Viti Levu to prep, provision, and wait for a weather window to sail south to New Zealand!  Back to the high seas!

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Vava’u, Tonga

Author: Pete
Location:  Vava’u Island Group, Tonga
Date:  August 5 – 10, 2015

 

On August 5th, we left Niue heading west for Tonga.  Niue fell astern as we rocketed downwind, running wing-wing under twenty knots of wind.  Moderate following seas gave us an extra push AND we didn’t even have to hand steer since Otto was back in the game.  The next day was August 7th.  What happened to August 6th ask you?  Gone!  Zip!  Ripped from our lives like a bandaid from a skinned knee!   Everyone else will have an August 6th, but the day will be an empty hole in our histories. Can you hear the Twilight Zone music?  I hope I don’t have to account for my whereabouts at some point in the future.

“Where were you on the night on August 6th, 2015?”

“Uhhh… I didn’t get one.”

“Get one what?”

“An August 6th, sir. I missed that day. Must have been out sailing.”

Off with his head!

 

Tonga isn’t across the international dateline, but they take the same date as Fiji for business reasons.  Thus, as we raced into Tongan waters, our trusty little boat burrowed twenty-four hours ahead in time like a wayward electron quantum tunneling out of a potential energy well.   erhm…sorry ‘bout that.  Won’t let him out again.

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We spotted the islands of the Vava’u group as we cut through a deep portion of the shoal and into more protected waters.  To the north and south of the cut, rollers exploded on the unseen reefs as we scooted through.  We sailed north then west, dodging rocky islands and a couple of whales before we tucked into the protected bay formed by Nuapapu and Vaka’eitu islands.  Tried anchoring in several spots before we were satisfied with our holding and swing room based on the weather supposed to be coming in.

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We woke on the 8th after a glorious, flat-water sleep.  Our bodies ate it up.  Two days on passage isn’t enough to get your body into a good circadian sailing rhythm.  We were making ready to go snorkel the nearby coral gardens when a lone man standing in waist-deep water started yelling and waving from the empty shore.  I dropped the dinghy in the water and zoomed in to see what was up.  In the shallows a stout Tongan man with a mustache and enormous smile introduced himself as David.  I don’t know what he was smiling about- he explained that his boat broke down on other side of the island and asked me if I could tow it back to his house.  Together we zipped to a sandy bay where his two boys, George and Kaho, were waiting with the little boat.  Apparently the motor had died while they were fishing and George swam the boat to shore with a rope tied around his waist.  I threw them a line and towed the boat back around to the other side of the island where we moored it just off a sandy beach.  David’s tin house stood just inside the line of palm and mango trees.  He told me his family had been on Vaka’eitu for many generations, pointing out a small cemetery on a hill where his parents, grandparent, and great-grandparent were buried.

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When David explained in his measured, thoughtful English that he had no tools to fix the motor, I offered to take a look at it.  I brought hardware from Tayrona and David went ashore to help his wife with lunch, leaving his sons on the skiff to help me with the repairs on the 2-stroke Yamaha .  The recoil mechanism to pull-start the motor wasn’t working and there was fuel leaking from somewhere.  The three of us sat on the little boat and wrenched off the recoil unit atop the engine.  The obnoxiously long winding spring had popped out of place and required a good deal of finesse and six hands to coerce back into the housing.  Nice to have so much help, even if we didn’t speak the same language all the time.  Pointing and noise making did the trick when ‘socket wrench’ didn’t translate into Tongan.  “Hey, pass me the ‘crick-a crick-a crick-a, please. Mālō”.  The fuel line connector had a torn seal that couldn’t be fixed, so I bypassed the connectors and spliced the fuel line right to the filter on the engine.  With a touch of persuasion the motor fired right up.  The boys were proud, David was relieved, and I was happy that I didn’t do any more grievous damage to the thing!  It’s nice to feel like you can give something tangible back to the people that share so much with us.  That boat and a small kayak are the only means of transportation from their island to the next town, five miles away across the bay, where the store, church, and school are.  I can’t imagine what happens if that motor goes south.  Daniel brought us three papaya, ten shucked coconuts, a dozen limes, and an invite to have dinner at his house to say thanks.

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Before our big date ashore, Miranda and I went snorkeling in the coral gardens in the shallow pass between Nuapapu and Vaka’eitu.  At first the coral looked blasted, with mostly dead stag horn, though it was surprisingly still full of  fish.  We finned across the shallows toward deep water, and after duck diving a few breakers we were out in the deep.  Whales sang hauntingly in the distance as we chased butterfly fish and dove among the brightly colored, rolling patchwork-quilt of coral hills.  I think Nemo was even out there!

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Also ran into a vicious predator of the deep.  This is one of the dreaded cone shells in the South Pacific.  It’s the Marbled Cone Snail.  It hunts other mollusks down and injects its venom through a harpoon structure that will also go through the foot of a careless wader.  There is another kind out here called the ‘Cigarette Cone Snail’ because you have time for one last cigarette if you get stuck by one before the venom gets you.  You know those things’ll kill you…

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This next one is just a plain old boring cowrie shell.  Really pretty though!  They have a beautiful, smooth shell which gave rise to the word ‘porcelain’ from the Italian name for the little guys.  Neat, huh?

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Back at the floating ranch we got ready to go in for dinner with David and his family.  We brought rice, veggies, and lemonade to share.  What do people like to eat on tiny Pacific islands?  Last time we treated a local guy to our cuisine he almost jumped overboard rather than try our peanut butter!  We also brought a bunch of little gifts for their kids: some cool shades for George, a pocket knife for Kaho, jewelry things for the girls.  David played guitar and sang harmony for Hika in a welcome song as the girls danced in the Polynesian style for us.  They served us a gorgeous spread of fried plantains, roasted grouper, and teriyaki chicken.  All of it was cooked over an open fire outside of their dwelling and had a beautiful smoky flavor.  I played a few tunes for them as well and we talked about life in Tonga.  It was a thoroughly enjoyable and unexpected evening.

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After we got back to the boat the rains came, first sprinkling, but then quickly turning into torrents.  It was the front we had seen on our weather reports and the reason we ducked clandestinely into the shelter of Tongan waters.  It rained all night, the kind of biblical rain that weighs the boat down, obliterates all other sounds but the hammering of the decks, and turns the radar screen into a wash of yellow so thick that the shore can’t be seen just a hundred meters away.  No more sea spray on the decks!

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We snorkeled in Willy Wonka’s coral gardens again the next days and prepared for our passage to Fiji with a few meals and a solid slab of brownies.  BAM!  Our original passage from Bora to Fiji was twice interrupted, both times leading us into extraordinary experiences for our troubles in changing our plans.  Go tell the sea gods about your plans.  They love a good joke.

More from Tayrona to come…

 

Niue, Rock of Polynesia

Author:  Pete
Location:  Niue

 

Ever heard of Niue?  I hadn’t either.  We wouldn’t have stopped here but for our faulty autohelm, but in retrospect, the memory of a couple days of hand steering fades quickly in the shadow of the island’s charm.  Niue is an isolated island country, in free association with New Zealand.  Many people here are Kiwis, and apparently 95% of Niueans live in NZ.  They must have exported all of the grumpy, sour citizens, because everyone we run into here is overly welcoming and amicable.

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We checked into the country, a strenuous task involving calling Radio Niue on VHF 16 and meeting the van at the wharf.  We sat in the back of the van, tailgate party style, and filled out the forms using knees and windows as writing surfaces.  We are one of three cruising boats in the anchorage.  It’s the only anchorage on the island, so I guess that makes us one of three boats in the country.  Needless to say, the officials weren’t too worried about us smuggling contraband or illegally immigrating.  Formalities were painless and the fifty dollar clearance fee was the least expensive we’ve seen in a long time.

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It’s too deep to anchor here.  Ten paces from the cliff shore the seabed drops to one hundred plus feet.  The Niueans have graciously provided robust moorings for we poor cruisers for a modest fee of $15 New Zealand dollars a night.  I don’t know the exchange rate, so it’s pretty much free in my book.  The bay is open to the west and gets some sizable swell at times.  The unprotected wharf would shred the stoutest dinghy tied along side, so all the boats and hoisted awkwardly out of the sea by an odd crane and plunked unceremoniously on the pier.  It’s standard operating procedure here I guess; even the locals coming back in respectable offshore fishing boats sling their craft in a harness and crane them onto trailers.

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We got in the water right away after clearing in.  The topography is amazing.  The reef shallows extends fifty feet out, then plummets into deep blue.  It’s a little spooky swimming out to the edge.  Closer to shore, the coral is regenerating after getting shredded by a hurricane in 2004.  There are also a species of sea krate that live only in Niue.  They’re like a sea snake, but need to breathe air.  It’s very exciting because they’re a fun combination of plentiful, highly curious, AND extremely venomous!  They say that the krates can’t bite humans, but since they have jaws, venom, and a brain the size of a raisin we decided to throw on the long wetsuits and gloves.  We’re pretending it’s because of the cooler waters here.

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There are also myriad sea caves to explore, both above and below of the water.  You need some good reef shoes, but it makes for fun exploration, a mixture of swimming and spelunking.  The crabs clamber out of the way and the booms and sloshes of the swell echo through the passages.

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Back on Tayrona, between visits from humpback whales and outrigger fishermen, I pulled out the autohelm drive piston, a Raytheon Type 1 Linear Drive.  Removing the plastic front cover exposes the motor which I peeled apart.  I pulled off the stator housing and cleaned the rotor and commutator of fine black dust from wearing of the brushes.  Thanks to Mr. Woods for making me tediously build an electric motor from scratch in high school.  You never know when you’re going to use some of the things you learn.  The clutch seemed to be working well when connected with reliable power but not when installed below, so I ran new wiring for the system and she fired right up!  We went for a little sea trial to verify that all was in working order and then came back to our mooring.  She’s back baby!  Good-bye hand steering and good riddance!

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Tamakautoga (yeah, say that 10 times fast), is the next little village south of the anchorage and was having a festival with dancing, food, music, and such that we found our way to.  There were a couple gringos there, but mostly it’s a local celebration.  Apparently there is a tradition that the youth put on dances for the community, so we were delighted when six young, shirtless boys in sarongs and grass necklaces came out to dance.  The music revved up and for a few minutes all seemed normal until an older gentleman walked out of the crowd and tucked a dollar bill into one of the boys’ loin cloths.  What?!  Then another person came up and tucked more money into their breeches.  The boys kept dancing like nothing was out of the ordinary.  Several other youth groups got up to dance, boys and girls, and the crowd kept tucking money in their cloths, for the girls the bills often went straight down the front of the shirt.  It was a little distracting, not to mention illegal where I’m from!  Also it was pretty windy, and notes kept falling out of they youths’ undergarments.  Helpful revelers chased the wayward bills down, and re-stuffed them where the sun don’t shine.  It reminded us of our friend Elizabeth.  The Polynesian dancing… not stuffing money into the undergarments.

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Niue is a perfect example of a raised atoll.  The ancient coral has been cut by rain and sea for millennia and now the island is pocked with caves and chasms for the exploring.  We followed a trail off the road to get to Togo Chasm and Anapala Chasm.  Trees have figured out how to grow directly out of the rock on Niue.  We weaved through sharp teeth of coral that tough vegetation was happily thriving on.  The chasms were deep cut ravines near the sea.  Seemed like a good place for a hermit to hide out.

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Went to church on Sunday to hear the Niuean hymn singing.  I really wanted to take some shots of the church, but was enraptured with the choir.  And I didn’t want to look like a schmuck.  The bibles were written in Niuean and the service was given in Niuean as well.  I think they said something like, “Be good to thy fellow man, and to the pius give free sinus medication.”  Still working on my translations.  It was a lot of fun getting dressed up in our Sunday finest, driving to the wharf in the dinghy and hauling it out with a crane.  Sea spray on one’s vestments seems to be standard operating procedure for the faithful ‘round these parts.

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The humpback whales that frequent these waters feed in Antarctica all “summer” (Nov-March) then migrate to this area to berth their calves in the warm water in “winter” (May-Sept).  Regulations in Niue prohibit snorkeling with the whales from your dinghy.  It’s an understandable effort to keep impact on their behavior to a minimum by reducing the number of idiots buzzing them with outboards while they’re trying to give birth.  I wouldn’t want some jerk flying one of those new fangled helicopter drones around my neonatal hospital room either.  Creepers.  Long story short, we went with the island’s only dive operation out to snorkel with the big guys.  Notice the crossed krates on the dive company’s insignia.  The whales were pretty active the day we went out, swimming fast and diving deep and often, which is bad when you want to chill with them on the surface.  We saw a fantastic breech but only snorkeled with them while they ran deep.  Still, the vibrations from their vocalization vibrates in your chest, airways, and sinuses.  Floating atop a two thousand foot column of water pulsating from these monsters’ vocalizations is enough to make you tremble in your wetsuit.  Or pee.

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A few days later, we woke up the morning of our departure from Niue and Miranda wasn’t through with the whales yet.  We went ashore and arranged to go out again that morning and try our luck one more time with Buccaneer Dive.  This time the weather was calmer and sunnier which prompts more tranquil behavior from the humpbacks.  We motored up to the ‘footprint’ of one that had just submerged.  They leave a flat, glassy patch of water where they were on the surface previously.  Following our guides we slid into the water and saw this big guy floating near the bottom in about 100 feet of water.  He’s well camouflaged from the top; you can only see his white scarring.  We waited in the water about ten minutes and he came back up.  The first movement you could see was his four-foot pectoral fins rolling him almost onto his back so he could see us, revealing his white belly.  He was 12 meters long and moved with an otherworldly grace for something so big.  He came up and checked us out, blew with a jarring percussion and cruised slowly by us back down to the bottom.  We hung out a bit, then took the launch to find others and give him a rest.  Ended up snorkeling with him again later on.  It was a great vibe on the boat; our Kiwi companions giggling with us like school girls.  What is it about sea life encounters that does that?

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The shots above are Shannon’s shots, he owns the Buccaneer dive operation and came with us to spot whales, bringing his gorgeous DSLR dive camera.  The shots below are ours, still, not terrible for a point-and-shoot.

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When we left shore that morning, Shannon assured us he had a good feeling we’d have great whale encounters that day.  He claims that the whales can always tell when they are good people on his boat and can sense the “buena onda” aboard.  Those kiwis we went out with must have been extra good folks to make up for our sorry tails.  Either way, he was right, and Poseidon’s blessings were certainly with us that day.

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Niue was an accidental stop for us.  We didn’t plan on making landfall here.  Our four days of hand steering were made worth it after the experiences we had and good people we met in Niue.  Just goes to show that it’s always best to follow the winds of fate that guide the boat.  Itineraries are to sailing as calculus is to mollusks- just plain silly.

With that, we’re off to Tonga.