Author: kerrizane

  • Clark & Vincent Visit, Part 2…..

    Dear F&F,

    May 3rd Monday – Sail to Bora Bora

    The conditions were just right. After we motored safely out of the reef pass
    at Tahaa, we hoisted the sails & enjoyed the 4 hour trip. Scott kept Clark &
    I on our feet, with 3 downwind tacks (safer & more controlled than gybes).
    It was hot & sticky but a lovely ride. I couldn’t resist playing “Bali Hai”
    from the South Pacific soundtrack as we approached. You would think one
    tropical island looks like another after a while, but there is something
    special about Bora Bora. Clark described it as King Kong mountain. It was
    easy & convenient to pick up a mooring at the Bora Bora Yacht Club. Their
    restaurant, docks & pension were damaged during hurricane Oli, which only
    came within 160 miles. American Jessica & local Teiva are running the bar,
    renting moorings & trying to get back on their feet. We end up staying over
    2 weeks.

    May 4th Tuesday – Pearl Beach Resort

    We dinghied into shore/town, I bought a few provisions but our fridge is
    marginal, not cooling fast enough. Didn’t do major shopping, more scouting.
    There looks to be more available than when we were here in November. One
    market changed ownership & everyone we asked which of the two was better
    said the Super-U. I could not really tell much difference. We reserved a
    rental car for tomorrow.

    In the afternoon we loaded the dinghy and shuttled Clark & Vincent to their
    hotel. It is a 15 minute ride to the islet, called a motu. Just about all of
    the nice resorts are located on a motu, not the main island. The property is
    as lovely as anticipated. The over water bungalows are picturesque, but I
    think they made the right choice with the beach bungalow, which is larger,
    you can walk out along the sand & it is closer to the pool.

    We had tried calling friend Wilfred Vincent who is assistant manager of the
    property at Tikehau & learned he was on vacation. He had been here in Bora
    Bora! We missed him by just one day – darn!

    We swam in the pool, took photos on the beach & enjoyed being tourists for
    the afternoon. They will meet us onshore to tour the island by car tomorrow,
    so our farewell was not too sad yet.

    We got somewhat wet on the return ride due to the prevailing wind. Moored
    near us, we stopped by a 66 foot Oyster, monohull moored near us. Boat name
    \”Fuerte\”, Home port \”London\”. We were delighted to meet Jubee & William who
    are British. The owner, not currently onboard, is American who lives in
    Rancho Santa Fe, California. William was a wealth of knowledge (&
    equipment!) for our struggling fridge. Later that evening, they stopped at
    “Beach House”. I fed her curry & red wine while he & Scott pondered our poor
    fridge. William didn’t care for curry, so declined, but I sent them home
    with a really good chocolate bar in appreciation. She & I talked easily.
    They have worked as captain & crew for hire on boats for 9 years, yikes! I
    am always in awe of those that work that way. They could not possibly get
    paid enough for all the work.

    It was a very nice connection & they will be here for the next couple of
    weeks, and we plan to stay awhile too. We want really calm weather to move
    on to Maupiti & it has been blowing really hard. Good for keeping it cooler..
    Good for sailing. Good for keeping the bugs away. But not good for getting
    into the tricky pass of Maupiti. We are in no particular rush. Plus C&V are
    at their hotel until Saturday. We plan to go with the dive company through
    their hotel Thursday to learn some of the sites.

    May 5th – Wednesday Drive Around Bora Bora

    Scott made a tech support Skype call to our Marina del Rey fridge & air
    conditioning buddy Alan Rosner. They decided we needed to empty the fridge,
    take it offline & vacuum the lines while we had the use of s/v Fuerte’s
    equipment. I threw out some food and took what I wanted to keep to the open
    air bar at the Bora Bora Yacht Club, where we are moored. They have a big
    refrigerator that is accessible 24/7 (to keep beer, etc) so I just put my
    bags of stuff in there. Very handy.

    The Avis person picked us up on the street on time & took us to the rental
    car office. Clark & Vincent took the shore boat from their resort to the
    main island, then caught the bus to the office where we all rendezvoused.
    This is the smallest island & sadly the most overbuilt & not very nice to
    drive around. But we came, so we saw it. We joked that ever since Goldie &
    Kurt stopped coming here the place has gone to heck! There are many
    dilapidated properties, trash piles, abandoned construction sites amidst the
    scenic lagoon & dramatic green mountain. Clark thought the mountain profile
    looked out of King Kong, we all agreed. The highlight was stopping a lot to
    take photos, looking past its shortcomings & finding the beauty where we
    could. We ate lunch at a forgettable place. It was recommended as good for
    cheeseburgers, but I am not sure that it was the correct place. We consoled
    ourselves down the road with ice cream, creme brulee (not as good as Raiatea
    Lodge) & coconut cake at \”Bloody Marys\” named from the movie “South
    Pacific”. There was a list of all the famous people that have eaten there
    (including photos of Kurt & Goldie). It was a perfectly touristy tiki hut
    with sand for the floor. Many of the locals are jaded/resentful of tourists
    so the service and attitude was not great, but we had fun anyway.

    Vincent is such a delight. I wish I had an exact recording of the
    description he gave of how much ice cream pleases him. Something like:
    \”Anticipating the moment when I will taste it, I am happy. Then in the
    moment, eating it; is wonderful. Then afterwards, remembering the taste
    gives me more pleasure.\” I don\’t think I will ever eat ice cream again in a
    blasé way. Overall, with our guests we have eaten a lot more quantity &
    sweets, but we\’re on vacation too!

    We parted ways on the street where C&V could catch the bus back to their
    resort shuttle boat, while Scott & I headed to the market & to return the
    car. We will see Clark in the morning for diving. The dive boat agreed to
    pick us & our gear up on “Beach House”. But we may not see Vincent again.
    They had secretly purchased a gift for me. A set of coasters with different
    lovely pictures of Bora Bora: flower, island, palm trees. Very sweet. I
    wanted to cry, sob into Vincent\’s arms actually. They have been such rays of
    sunshine. Not that Scott & I haven\’t had fun on our own. We have, can &
    will. But because I love my friends deeply and it will be awhile until I see
    them again, parting feels wrenching. They are still at their hotel until
    Saturday night, so maybe we will go there for dinner. I managed to keep all
    this internal drama under wraps & say goodbye with grace.

    At the market I hesitated to buy much that needed refrigeration, although
    Scott has confidence that this treatment will be the solution. I left the
    lettuce, cheese, etc at the yacht club fridge with my other perishables. We
    opened the boat, we always have to close it up for potential rain & it gets
    very hot in the salon. Scott started the job of vacuuming the fridge lines
    with the borrowed equipment from William. We have been running the generator
    for 4 hours. He is watching a Sci-Fi TV series, while I am writing. I
    snorkeled before sunset. Near the shore I saw an octopus, several colorful
    clams & when I swam back to the boat I saw a long wahoo, maybe 3 feet, we
    kind of scared each other. Good sushi… Got a load of laundry done. The
    washer is also spazzing out. Always something.

    We plan to get up earlier than usual to get all our dive gear together.
    We\’ll use the company tanks, which are aluminum, not steel. I\’ll have to
    wear more weight, but that is ok. Just need to remember to make up a belt.

    May 6th – Thursday Diving with Blue Nui

    The best sites outside the reef are not easy for us to get to on our own.
    Too deep and rough to anchor the big boat. And too far away to go by dinghy..
    So we will splurge and pay for a few days of diving. It is very convenient
    that they pick us & our gear up (we used their tanks, but brought everything
    else) where “Beach House” is moored & zoomed out to the sites in about 20
    minutes. It was a bumpy high speed ride, but worth it.

    We had two great dives with instructor Gilles, associate divemaster Fred who
    took underwater video footage, two Italian guests & Clark. All in the group
    were comfortable underwater so it was a nice experience. The visibility was
    great! It is such a treat to have clear water. Plenty of sharks followed us,
    ever hoping to get fed. Scott enjoyed himself, even without his camera,
    although he will surely bring it tomorrow. I must be finally acclimatizing
    somewhat to the hot weather. I actually felt a bit cool at the end of the
    second dive and the water is still 85 degrees!

    We were back onboard our boat just after noon. After rinsing our gear &
    taking showers, we zoomed to shore to get some of our food out of the yacht
    club fridge. I made the ever popular tuna salad, always satisfying.

    Clark & Vincent called and invited us to join them at one of the main island
    restaurants, Kaina Hut Bistro. I was thrilled to see them again. Besides,
    with our fridge offline, cooking is not that convenient. Scott has done two
    rounds of repairs. It is a bit of a waiting game right now to see if the
    temperature goes down enough and stays down. Stay tuned.

    The restaurant had a lovely ambience and good seafood. Tomorrow night we
    will dinghy to their resort for a Polynesian dinner & show. The fun with
    friends continues!

    May 7th – Friday Diving & Dinner Show

    Today was the last day of diving for Clark. Tomorrow they catch the 6 pm
    flight to Papeete then just before midnight the red eye to LA. Of course we
    took advantage of the opportunity to offload some stuff we don\’t need/want
    here right now. They will ship it to Redondo, where Mike will hold it for
    us. Mostly books & DVDs. Clark finished the book \”My Life in France\” by
    Julia Child & passed it on to me – I am very excited to read it.

    The diving in Bora Bora is very good. Clear water with lots of sharks and
    large variety of fish. It is so easy to go with the company instead of
    schlepping on our own in the dinghy. Plus all the other divers have been fun
    and even the new divers seem relaxed, so it makes it very enjoyable. Scott
    is always in heaven when he gets to shoot photos or video. And I am the
    happiest when underwater, so we are both good. It turns out we had two
    pre-paid days leftover from diving with Marc at Blue Nui in Manihi, so today
    we started a new package. We\’ll probably go 5 more days, 2 dives each
    morning . Terrific!

    Owner/instructor Gilles & I played some underwater today. It reminded me of
    diving with Terry Kennedy in the Sea of Cortez. There is nothing like
    fooling around to make your skills improve. Maybe Scott will post a \”deleted
    scenes\” video on the website. Clark purchased their photographer’s DVD. Fred
    is super nice & fun too. Scott is learning some techniques by watching him
    shoot. We watched the DVD of May 6th diving. After watching Fred do it,
    Scott grabbed the tail of a particularly tolerant lemon shark, they’ve named
    Blanchette for the white mark on her tail. That was definitely the video’s
    highlight – oy veh!

    We went to a site that sometimes has manta rays. We divers didn\’t see any,
    but it was still an OK dive. The wife of a honeymoon couple snorkeled for
    the first time ever & she saw a manta! We were jealous, but so happy for
    her. They are Italian & she was adorably enthusiastic telling the story.

    We dinghied to C&V\’s motu resort in our bathing suits. We knew it would be a
    wet ride with the waves & wind. We took our dinner clothes in a dry bag,
    changed in the bathroom. The guys were gorgeous in pareos with white shirts
    and a plumeria blossom behind the ear. The food was crazy expensive for the
    buffet ($90 each not including wine!), but it was our last night together &
    there was a live music & Tahitian dance performance afterwards. Scott is not
    a big fish eater, mostly it was seafood. He didn\’t starve with a slice of
    beef, roasted pork & some fruit. I bravely tried an oyster since C&V raved
    how great they were. It really was fine with a splash of vinegar. Yeah, it\’s
    a texture thing… I loved the tuna sashimi & put the vanilla sauce on four
    different beautiful little desserts.

    Great tiki hut ambience, local music & a traditional dance performance. The
    dancers grabbed tourists to join on stage. Scott & I managed to grab the
    cameras and let C&V shake their booties while we captured the moment on
    film. Man, they are good dancers & did not look at all goofy, like most of
    the other non-Polynesians. Plus wearing their pareos, they totally fit in.
    What a nice finale!

    We had one more round of hugs & kisses under the stars as they helped us
    cast off the dinghy. At the end of a seder we say: Next year in Jerusalem.
    With them we keep saying: Two years until Australia! I would gladly have
    them sooner, anywhere, but that seems the most likely place. Thank you our
    Paris friends, for bringing so much sunshine to French Polynesia.

    Cindy & Scott

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES
    TIME: 2010/05/04 00:38
    LATITUDE: 16-29.36S
    LONGITUDE: 151-45.66W
    MARINE: NO
    WIND_SPEED: 7
    WIND_DIR: 063T
    CLOUDS: 40%
    VISIBILITY: 25
    BARO: 1014.1
    AIR_TEMP: 32.2C
    COMMENT: Beach House – MOORED – Bora Bora Yacht Club, Bora Bora

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES
    TIME: 2010/05/02 17:07
    LATITUDE: 16-43.42S
    LONGITUDE: 151-26.70W
    MARINE: NO
    WIND_SPEED: 7
    WIND_DIR: 150T
    CLOUDS: 30%
    VISIBILITY: 20
    BARO: 1015.6
    AIR_TEMP: 28.9C
    COMMENT: Beach House – ANCHORED – Uturoa, Raiatea…….land touring

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES
    TIME: 2010/05/01 05:07
    LATITUDE: 16-40.86S
    LONGITUDE: 151-29.17W
    MARINE: NO
    WIND_SPEED: 11
    WIND_DIR: 186T
    CLOUDS: 60%
    VISIBILITY: 20
    BARO: 1016.7
    AIR_TEMP: 28.3C
    COMMENT: Beach House – MOORED -Taravao Yacht Club, Tahaa,

  • MOOREA to HUAHINE….The New Season Begins…..

    Dear F&F,

    One of the great things about Moorea is that it is not too far from Tahiti.
    A good distance for a shakedown cruise. All systems were go. Well, as “go”
    as they were going to get from Tahiti. Our list of things to fix in New
    Zealand is a yard long, but we are functional & eager to leave Marina Taina
    behind us. I’m not saying anything to slight the marina, we were just done
    being tied up there.

    From past reports, you may recall that I am prone to seasickness. In the
    past 2 years, I learned that this ailment does not go away by wishful
    thinking or denial. My goal is prevention using the least amount of
    medication along with smart behavior. On 3 hour the motor crossing from
    Tahiti to Moorea, I managed well with Bonine & the A.W.Z. (annoying wrist
    zapper). Instead of stimulating the wrist trigger point with just a magnet,
    it delivers a mild electrical pulse. I suspect the mechanism is that it
    gives your brain something else to process, which interferes with the mind
    registering seasick symptoms. At any rate, we happily arrived at Opanohu
    Bay, Moorea with plenty of time for a snorkel.

    DIVING: We dove 8 times in 5 days. The highlight was a 3 foot long green sea
    turtle that was very friendly. We saw it on three separate dives. We assume
    it is used to being fed by divers. We had nothing to offer but
    companionship. It let us touch its flipper & shell. Then it bored of staring
    at us with no free lunch, so eventually started chomping the coral. It has a
    powerful parrot-like beak. We took care to keep our fingers away from its
    mouth! When it surfaced to breathe, it would dive back down right to us.
    Very sweet.

    We anchored the dinghy outside the reef near where the dive operators take
    tourists. Sometimes we saw a few other divers underwater. One day our timing
    was just right to enjoy close up views of impressive lemon sharks, and less
    bold black tip sharks circling the canister of chum supplied by the dive
    company. Even after they pulled up the chum container, the sharks stayed
    around us a long time, enjoying the lingering scent of fish bits.

    Scott has adjusted our compressor to fill the tanks with max air so on a
    typical dive we can stay down over an hour with plenty of reserves – nice.
    Our first morning dive we \”overdressed\” for the water temperature; we wore
    too thick wetsuits. The water is 84-85 degrees. The air 90 plus. We did not
    get any benefit of hypothermia so stayed pretty hot all day. With thinner
    wetsuits, submerged for 2 hours or more, we were able to stay much more
    comfortable. We keep waiting for the weather to start cooling down a bit,
    but not yet.

    We had heard of an area near the Intercontinental Hotel where stingrays are
    periodically fed, so they tend to hang out. Even though it was shallow
    enough to stand & we could see them well with masks floating on the surface,
    Scott put on his scuba gear in order to stay down & get the best camera
    angles. Video to follow. They are graceful to watch & feel silky to the
    touch. These are the same type of generally harmless stingrays that were the
    unfortunate cause of wild life wildman Steve Irwin\’s loss on the Great
    Barrier Reef a few years ago.

    A second “touristy” dive was an area where stone carved tikis were sunk..
    Former decorations of Club Med, closed long ago.

    SISTER SHIP: In November, we had seen “Tatajuba” Switch 51, hull #12 out of
    the water at the shipyard in Raiatea. We were thrilled to see her pull up to
    anchor near us one morning. After 5 years of cruising, the French owners
    with two teenaged children want to return to land life in France. They have
    an American buyer from the San Francisco bay area who plans to get the boat
    back to the US west coast. Scott has been in email touch with this
    prospective Switch owner.

    DRIVING THE ISLAND: We got a good rate on renting a car for “all day” but
    even with many stops we had pretty much seen the sights in 3 hours. The
    highest paved road did not go very high up the mountains. I was looking
    forward to a hike in cooler air, but settled for a 15 minutes stroll under a
    tropical canopy. When it is this hot, the best thing is to be in the water
    as much as possible. I was pleased to purchase some bananas & an avocado at
    a roadside stand.

    We stopped at the U.C. Berkeley Marine Lab. We had a chance meeting at the
    market with Hunter who worked there on our last trip and hoped to see him
    again. He wasn’t there, but Frank Murphy, the stations director, kindly took
    time to answer our questions about the facility & operations. Frank has a
    separate business: Tahiti Expeditions: www.tahitiexpetitions.com offering
    nature & cultural tours. I wish we had met him before today!

    FRIDGE ON THE FRITZ: April 22 we noticed that our primary refrigerator was
    not getting down to the set point. We called Gille of Promarine in Tahiti
    who helped us with our freezer a few months ago. He said he was very busy
    but that he would help if he could. We motored back to Tahiti early the next
    morning, glad that we weren’t any further away from help. The marina was
    full, but we didn’t think we needed to be at a dock. When building the boat,
    we had one European outlet installed for the express purpose of a foreign
    technician being able to operate a power tool with our power source. We tied
    up to an open mooring, zoomed to the shore to pick up Gill & returned with
    his equipment in hand. His diagnosis is that our lines needed to be flushed..
    Sadly his pump would not work with our outlet. Gauges showed proper 220
    voltage flowing, but his motor would not start. Presuming his motor was at
    fault, they zoomed back to shore, hoping the owner of the machine would be
    able to kick it to life after lunch. We got a prompt phone call & Scott went
    to fetch Gill with his equipment for the 2nd time. Still no go. Now we had
    so suspect our outlet was faulty. We motored the big boat to the shore, side
    tying in front of a restaurant near all the mega-yachts. With Euro shore
    power, the device worked, lines were flushed & we just had to wait several
    hours to see if the temperature would drop to the correct level. It was
    Friday night & Gill reassured us he would have domestic strife if he agreed
    to pick up his equipment on Friday night. So, sure enough he called Friday
    evening & Scott fetched him one more time, to check the system & retrieve
    his gear. With hope & prayers we awoke Saturday to a happy refrigerator so
    set off for Moorea once again.

    SAIL TO HUAHINE: We have been looking forward to a visit from friends Clark
    & Vincent for a long time. We saw them on each of our 5 trips to France
    during the construction of Beach House & they visited us in LA a few times.
    We have talked about them meeting us in French Polynesia for 6 years, and
    now the time has come!

    It is 115 miles from Tahiti to Huahine, so we suggested they fly to Papeete,
    then take the inter-island flight to meet us in Huahine in order to avoid
    the long sail. It is a huge help to us that they have a stopover in Los
    Angeles. They are kindly bringing us many essential boat supplies.

    We rose before the sun and exited Opanohu reef pass at about 6:00 a.m. We
    motored for about one hour to see how the wind would develop and were happy
    to see it setting up for a spinnaker sail. We took our time and had a smooth
    hoisting. \”Miss Piggy\” (aka: Beach House) shone, going 9 knots in only 14
    knots of wind. We even hit 12.5 knots (very fast for you non sailors!). We
    took 2 hour watch shifts. It was plenty hot by the afternoon with the sun in
    our face and the wind at our back. When the wind slowed down, we motor
    sailed the last hour. Using the engines allows us to run the small air
    conditioner in our bedroom. Heavenly bliss! If we can’t get in the water,
    chilling with the a.c. is a pretty good substitute. We had the anchor down
    in Fare Harbor, Huahine by 5:00 p.m. with just 3 other boats nearby.

    It was a hot but peaceful night. A strong short rain shower nicely washed
    the salt off Beach House. We are still keeping an eye on our main
    refrigerator as it does not seem to be cooling as quickly as it should.
    Otherwise we are preparing for our guests arrival tomorrow morning. Looking
    forward to sharing the benefits of boat life with our friends. With temps
    persisting in the 90s, we plan to be a in the water a lot.

    KIT,

    Cindy and Scott

  • Re: POSITION REPORT

    Hello Scott,

    I wonder why you are sending me these reports? The address for YOTREPS reports is:

    yotreps@pangolin.co.nz

    However your reports MUST follow the YOTREPS format exactly or they will be rejected as spam. The problem with the report below is that the first line should be:

    YOTREPS AIRMAIL

    As an alternative you could check in with the Pacific Seafarer\’s net on 14.300MHz at 0300Z or as a Winlink user you could use the position report form that is included within Airmail and which takes care of formatting and addressing issues.

    Best regards …Mike

    At 02:23 PM 25/04/2010 +0000, you wrote:
    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: 2010/04/25 00:11
    LATITUDE: 17-29.51S
    LONGITUDE: 149-51.16W
    MARINE: NO
    WIND_SPEED: 12
    WIND_DIR: 052T
    CLOUDS: 60%
    VISIBILITY: 15
    BARO: 1014.9
    AIR_TEMP: 32.8C
    COMMENT: Beach House – ANCHORED – Oponohu Bay, Moorea….Huahine tomorrow…Fridge Fixed

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES
    TIME: 2010/04/22 22:49
    LATITUDE: 17-29.50S
    LONGITUDE: 149-51.17W
    MARINE: NO
    WIND_SPEED: 3
    WIND_DIR: 152T
    CLOUDS: 35%
    VISIBILITY: 15
    BARO: 1012.9
    AIR_TEMP: 27.8C
    COMMENT: Beach House – ANCHORED – Oponohu Bay, Moorea – did a drive around the island today

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES
    TIME: 2010/04/16 02:58
    LATITUDE: 17-29.51S
    LONGITUDE: 149-51.14W
    MARINE: NO
    WIND_SPEED: 1
    WIND_DIR: 027T
    CLOUDS: 45%
    VISIBILITY: 20
    BARO: 1013.2
    AIR_TEMP: 32.2C
    COMMENT: Beach House – ANCHORED, Oponohu Bay, Moorea

  • 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