Author: kerri

  • Paris Sun Shines in Polynesia, Part 1…..

    Dear F&F,

    Clark & Vincent Visit….Part 1

    April 27 – May 3, 2010

    In 2003-2004 we enjoyed visiting friends Clark & Vincent in Paris during our
    trips to France while our boat was under construction. After “Beach House”
    splashed, they came to Southern French City of Sete for her maiden sail &
    helped us unpack & stow the container of stuff we’d sent from Los Angeles..
    We started talking then about where they should join us for a tropical
    vacation. French Polynesia was decided as the perfect place to have them
    aboard.

    Every visitor to “Beach House” acts as our import agent. Our usual “ship to”
    angel, Mike Lonnes in Redondo Beach, received some stuff. Then Clark &
    Vincent’s friend Ken in Westwood kindly collected the last minute orders
    plus everything that Mike had. My sister Alberta sent a welcome bag of
    books, DVDs & notes of encouragement.

    Their flight from Paris to L.A. was delayed due to the ash from Iceland’s
    volcano shutting down Europe’s airports. Thankfully none of us were on a
    tight schedule. By trimming their L.A. visit from three days to one and
    skipping Moorea, they were able to still package together a combination one
    week boat plus four days resort excursion. I had warned Clark that the time
    would fly by, and it did.

    Scott & I arrived in Huahine two days ahead of our guests. We really love
    the beauty of Huahine & were happy for the opportunity to revisit the
    islands we had seen briefly in November during the Hawaki Nui Va’a Outrigger
    canoe race.

    April 27th they took the island hopper plane from Tahiti to Huahine. At
    first told that there was no taxi, they got a ride from the airport to the
    dinghy dock at the expected rendezvous time. They brought only 2 large & 1
    small suitcases, which included snorkeling gear & all our stuff. It was so
    great to see their smiling faces at last! They got into the swing of
    tropical feelings (including the heat) right away.

    I gave them the live aboard orientation because everything from opening a
    window, cupboard or the refrigerator requires special care & is different
    from a house. Using & flushing the toilet is very “special” these days, as
    our primary vacuflush unit is only managing liquid. We all pooped on port.
    No paper down the toilet, use the trash can. We had a good chuckle about the
    double meaning of “poo bell”: a poubelle is the French word for trash can.

    Scott launched in right away installing the new charge controller they
    brought. The gizmo that transfers our solar power into battery power. Alas,
    the new unit had the same trouble as the old! He had to Skype & the
    technician who helped him troubleshoot. Turns out it was a corroded fuse! We
    didn\’t need the new unit…but now we have a spare – c\’est la vie. Why they
    didn\’t have us go through this step before, who knows. We realize it is hard
    to give thorough technical support over the phone.

    Our guests wasted no time getting in the water. They jumped in at every
    opportunity & were good examples of how to have fun aboard “Beach House”.
    There is always some repair or maintenance to do & we can become slaves of
    our life instead of enjoying it, if we don’t make sure to take time to have
    fun.

    Walking around the small town, they oohed & aahed at everything: tropical
    flowers, lush green foliage; beautiful native people weaving palm fronds. It
    is a joy to be with them with their fresh & genuine enjoyment of this
    experience. We reserved a car for the next day. Scott needs some time to
    catch up on some projects, so the 3 of us will take the delightful drive
    around the island.

    At the market we made a good haul. The fridge is maintaining & we will get
    it checked Friday or Saturday in Raiatea. After we got the dinghy unloaded,
    I stowed the groceries, Clark napped and Vincent read one of the many books
    he brought. Their first night dinner was a hit: Szechuan eggplant & shrimp
    over brown rice. Nicely enhanced by two bottles of Blanc de Blanc.

    Scott showed Clark geography on our chart plotter – where we are, where we
    plan to go. Clark showed us a star program on his I-Phone, very cool. We all
    stretched out on the top of the bimini & enjoyed the moon & stars. We turned
    on the underwater lights, but no fish came to eat my shrimp shells. Vincent
    took a moonlight swim. Scott joined C&V in their nightly routine of a cup of
    chamomile tea. We all share a fondness for really good dark chocolate. A
    good first day.

    April 28th – Wednesday Drive Around Huahine

    We got lucky to see visit the black pearl farm that was closed when Scott &
    I had visited previously. A driver took us a short ride in his small power
    boat to the work space & boutique built on stilts over the water. The owner
    explained the process of seeding the cultured pearls and Clark used the
    opportunity to buy a pair of earrings & pendant that his friend had
    requested he purchase. Mostly I think they look like ball bearings, but
    these were especially lovely and I am sure she’ll be happy.

    We stopped many times to enjoy the views and take photos. Three guys on
    bicycles nearly kept up with us. We had a leisurely lunch at Chez Tara,
    savoring the mahi mahi with vanilla sauce. We happily got in our air
    conditioned rental car & were grateful not to be sweating it out on
    bicycles.

    When we reached the vanilla farm, we were nearing the hour the car was due
    to be returned. Having taken this interesting tour with Scott before, I did
    not want them to miss out. The proprietor was limping and more eager to sell
    us vanilla beans than lead a tour. As we wandered a bit toward the
    net-covered plants, one of the workers asked if he could help us. We decided
    the opportunity to gain local knowledge was more important than a late
    return fee. Francois was a colorful character. He described the importance
    of hand pollinating each flower which then produced one vanilla bean. He
    pointed out the other crops: grapefruit, oranges, avocados & gave us some
    fresh picked limes.

    Poor Scott had not had a moment to do any of the things he’s hoped. He
    discovered a leaky oil hose on the generator. We emailed friend Jerry Woods
    & got a quick reply that there is a good mechanic in Raiatea. We did not
    have a firm schedule, but it now seemed prudent to scurry to Raiatea before
    the weekend.

    April 29th – Thursday Raiatea

    There was not enough wind to sail, so we motored the 4 hours from Huahine to
    Raiatea. Vincent is a better crew than me – able to read underway! That is
    one thing that tilts me toward seasickness in even mild conditions. It was
    hot and although I was under the shade of the bimini the whole trip, I got
    sunburned in my bikini top. Drats! I need to remember the strength of the
    reflection of the sun off the white boat & ocean.

    We have to hand it to Raiatean efficiency. We tied up to the fuel dock and
    took on some diesel. Shockingly quick arrival of both the generator &
    refrigerator mechanics had us and our capable translators scurrying. The
    refrigerator technician did not want to mess with or really have the right
    equipment, so we are hoping it is functioning well enough for now. Mostly
    praying it hangs in there.

    The generator mechanic had the leaking section of oil hose cut out and refit
    in an hour. Fantastic. C,V & I walked to the market where I got some fresh
    produce, more wine & chocolate: the basic food groups. I also scored a
    cooked chicken which is always a welcome find.

    April 30th -May 1st Scuba Diving Raiatea & Tahaa

    We anchored at a sweet spot between two motus. It was a recommended dive
    site in the guide books. Clark had not been diving in five years but was
    like a fish riding a bicycle. He did great, not at all an A.S.P. (Air
    Sucking Pig – disparaging term for an inexperienced or nervous diver that
    quickly breathes down their tank, making for a short dive.)

    The current was fairly strong and the visibility was only mediocre. But
    there was a lot to see. Grey reef & black tip sharks, eels, the usual array
    of tropical fish and the not so common pipe fish. Vincent enjoyed swimming &
    snorkeling. He discovered that fish prefer to eat chicken scraps over
    vegetables – so much for the food chain!

    May 2nd Sunday – Drive Around Raiatea

    All four of us went on the excursion to drive around Raiatea. It was
    similar, but different to Huahine. There is a Japanese word for this: madoki
    (similar, but different). Plenty of lush tropical scenery, lovely views of
    the lagoon. Not as many interesting places to stop. About 1:00 p.m. we were
    getting hungry and seeking a nice lunch spot. Many places on Sunday are
    closed. We stopped at a Chinese run “greasy spoon” which did not pass
    Vincent’s or Scott’s sniff test, so moved on.

    The Raiatea Lodge shined as a mirage of comfort & luxury. A small hotel
    owned by an Australian couple. Now after 1:30 pm, we were initially turned
    away due to the late hour. Clark threw himself on the mercy of the waitress
    and chef, who succumbed to his charm. We were told to order quickly if we
    wanted to eat. While pondering the menu, Scott observed that the only other
    party at the open air restaurant included Kurt Russell & Goldie Hawn. What a
    hoot! A lovely setting, plus bonus celebrity citing. Small world story:
    Scott had taken flight ground school with Kurt 20+ years ago & was curious
    if he ever got his pilot’s license (Scott opted out after soloing). That
    was excuse enough to go say hello & yes, Kurt did become a pilot. And no,
    Goldie still looks fabulous out of makeup. They were friendly but we did not
    fawn over them, each enjoyed our meal.

    I asked the owner, who had warmed up to us by now, if we could go for a
    swim. We had brought our suits in hopes of finding a nice beach along the
    road. He kindly suggested we enjoy our dessert in the pool. When dining with
    Vincent one is certain to have ice cream for dessert and he and Scott urged
    me to spring for the crème brulee even though I was much too full from the
    already ample meal. We were really living the high life now.

    Cheeky Moment: We will never again listen to the Simon & Garfunkle song “The
    Boxer” as it is written. Vincent strolls up with a stack of towels singing:
    “I am just a “pool” boy, but my story’s seldom told”. We burst out in
    giggles and haven’t stopped singing it that way ever since.

    We got to see a room. It is a lovely inn that we would recommend to anyone
    traveling to Raiatea. Goldie & Kurt said they used to vacation in Bora Bora
    3x/year, but now prefer this island.

    Next…Part 2,

    Cindy & Scott

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES
    TIME: 2010/05/01 23:49
    LATITUDE: 16-44.71S
    LONGITUDE: 151-25.53W
    MARINE: NO
    WIND_SPEED: 4
    WIND_DIR: 019T
    CLOUDS: 30%
    VISIBILITY: 20
    BARO: 1014.3
    AIR_TEMP: 33.3C
    COMMENT: Beach House – ANCHORED – Tevapiti Pass, Raiatea…Diving

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES
    TIME: 2010/04/30 04:54
    LATITUDE: 16-43.98S
    LONGITUDE: 151-29.10W
    MARINE: NO
    WIND_SPEED: 4
    WIND_DIR: 079T
    CLOUDS: 60%
    VISIBILITY: 20
    BARO: 1016.7
    AIR_TEMP: 28.3C
    COMMENT: Beach House – MOORED – Apooiti Bay, Raiatea,

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES
    TIME: 2010/04/26 03:54
    LATITUDE: 16-43.20S
    LONGITUDE: 151-02.30W
    MARINE: NO
    WIND_SPEED: 3
    WIND_DIR: 033T
    CLOUDS: 60%
    VISIBILITY: 15
    BARO: 1016.3
    AIR_TEMP: 28.3C
    COMMENT: Beach House – ANCHORED – Fare, Huahine,

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES
    TIME: 2010/04/25 20:20
    LATITUDE: 17-10.97S
    LONGITUDE: 150-24.50W
    COURSE: 298T
    SPEED: 8.6
    MARINE: YES
    WIND_SPEED: 16
    WIND_DIR: 079T
    SWELL_DIR: NNE
    SWELL_HT: 1.5M
    SWELL_PER: 10
    CLOUDS: 60%
    VISIBILITY: 20
    BARO: 1018.3
    AIR_TEMP: 30.6C
    SEA_TEMP: 28.3C
    COMMENT: Beach House -EN ROUTE – 1/2 way to Huahine, Spinnaker Run…..Fast!

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES
    TIME: 2010/04/24 01:05
    LATITUDE: 17-34.65S
    LONGITUDE: 149-37.35W
    MARINE: NO
    WIND_SPEED: 8
    WIND_DIR: 325T
    CLOUDS: 90%
    VISIBILITY: 13
    BARO: 1013.8
    AIR_TEMP: 26.1C
    COMMENT: Beach House -MOORED – Marina Taina, Tahiti. Need Fridge Repair -RAIN

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES
    TIME: 2010/04/22 04:23
    LATITUDE: 17-30.08S
    LONGITUDE: 149-48.34W
    COMMENT: Beach House – ANCHORED – Cooks Bay, Moorea…..Marketing!

  • Easter Island…..getting ready to go west!

    Dear F&F,
    We just posted the Easter Island Gallery and for those of you have
    more interest in \”Rapa Nui\”, we recommend the History Channels\’ DVD,
    \”Digging For The Truth: Giants of Easter Island\” hosted by Josh Bernstein.

    As we write this post, we have officially checked out of French Polynesia,
    though we will be here for the rest of the month and into mid May visiting
    Moorea, Huahine, Raiatea – Tahaa, Bora Bora and hopefully Maupiti and
    Mopellia Atolls en-route to our first stop in the Cook Islands at Aitutaki.

    We will be visited by friends Clark and Vincent all the way from Paris while
    sailing from Huahine to Bora Bora and hope to have much to report upon our
    leaving French Polynesia for destinations west.

    As always, feel free to write us at any email you have for us or drop a note
    at the website\’s \”Contact Us\” form.

    KIT, (keep in touch)
    Scott and Cindy…..leaving Papeete, Tahiti around the 15th of April.

  • Tahiti Boat Projects and a brush with \”Cyclone OLI\” (written February 24th, 2010)…..

    Dear F&F,

    This is the companion post to our “12 – 2009 – Tahiti Boat Projects” photo
    gallery.

    The photos show about 10% of what we actually did. I don’t want to bore
    you with too many details and the photos pretty much tell the story. Some
    of the nice “Tahiti Topside” photos of the sister island of Moorea were
    taken while Cindy hauled me 75 feet off the water; up the mast. We had
    broken our sail track on the way from the Galapagos to the Marquesas and it
    took us the better part of five days to replace it. While “aloft” I took
    some cool photos of the Marina and Moorea. (See our 09_2009 Tahiti Topside
    Photo Gallery).

    It’s the middle of Summer here and while you all in the Northern Hemisphere
    are emailing us about how wet and cold it is in the US, Canada and Europe,
    it’s hotter than blazes down here in the Southern Hemisphere summer. Think
    “Palm Springs in August”. As we don’t have a car and we have lots to do
    aboard the boat, a bit of cabin fever (at least cool cabin fever) has set
    in. Also, as this is an \”El Nino\” year, we get to watch for the errant
    HURRICANE that occasionally threatens French Polynesia. So far, only OLI
    (As of February 24th, 2010) has done some area wide mischief here. A tree
    next to the boat fell down. The island of Tubuai to our south was not so
    lucky. They got a direct hit, one life lost and 200 homes destroyed. READ
    THAT AS ALL THE HOMES WERE DESTROYED. It blew 60 knots in the marina here
    for several hours. The small side of Tahiti, Tahiti Nui had 100 mph winds
    for awhile. Glad we weren\’t there!… The Hurricane never came closer to
    Tahiti than 170 miles. SO, you can imagine being in the way of a Catagory
    3-5 hurricane like KATRINA.

    Cindy has been more than patient during all of the boat project and weather
    challenges. Her mantra is: \”It will all be okay IF: \”YOU GET ME IN THE
    WATER”. This has been our second “summer” in the wrong hemisphere in very
    hot weather. We will try not to repeat this a third time.

    On two trips we’ve taken to Los Angeles so far, we’ve brought back over 350
    lbs of spare boat parts and “stuff”…..It’s getting harder to find a place to
    put it all.

    *A partial, but by no means complete list. If you’re a glutton for boat
    project punishment……read on: (Disclaimer) – Children under 13 and Women of
    any age may need to be protected from this list; skip to end if this
    describes you.*

    Replace Zincs on propellers, grease propellers, clean hull, replace zincs on
    refrigeration/freezer units (underwater heat exchangers like a radiator in a
    car)

    Recharge, evacuate, troubleshoot Refrigeration/Freezer issue

    Chase ANTS that got aboard.

    Rebuild main toilet

    Clean out all toilet lines that have stopped up over 5+ years.

    Seal deck seam tape inside to insure no leakage when at sea.

    Replace escape hatch gaskets and reseal side port lights/replace gaskets

    Hydraulic steering fluid replacement

    Engines: replace oil and filters. Fuel filters, primary and secondary. Lap
    cone clutch on starboard transmission. Tighten motor mounts. Reline engine
    room and generator room sound material.

    Generator: EVERYTHING. New electronic governor, new capacitors, coolant
    leak, fuel air leak.

    Air Conditioning Main: Re-wire for 220 volt/50-60 hz power. Fix plumbing
    leaks, replace 3 cooling sensors.

    New Little Air Conditioning: Install….TWICE…Complete

    Mast/Rigging: Replace leisure furl in boom furler track, gooseneck shims.

    Maintain all deck hardware due to UV damage including all shock cords, zip
    ties, rings, cotters, etc.

    Wash boat and Wax (in April)

    Paint and repair washer/dryer

    INVENTORY EVERYTHING on a spread sheet.

    New AIS (automatic identification system), update software in
    chartplotters.

    New little inverter for computers, old one fried on Galapagos crossing.

    Complete SCUBA compressor maintenance

    Lots of deck hardware/anchor roller maintenance

    Repair window screens and canvass

    Repair mainsail chafe, genneker tear, spinnaker sock tears

    Remove and replace water tanks and replace gauge sensors

    Replaced all interior ventilation fans.

    Replaced all Watermaker filters and main water system filters

    Lots of wiring clean up

    Drawers needed hardware fixing

    Radio modem for “at sea email” needed re-cabling

    Finish work on several wood pieces and vents

    Clean and organize everything….mildew is a bitch!

    Gee when I see it written down this way, It doesn’t look like that much. I
    know forgot lots; most likely a mental block.

    We have put in approximately 4 months of 5 day weeks doing all this
    stuff….only about 2 weeks to go as of this posting in late February 2010.

    And you all thought we were retired!….

    Happy Holidays,

    KIT (keep in touch),

    Scott and Cindy