Blog

  • Maupiti Diving Day #1…..

    Dear F&F,

    In brief, the diving here is fantastic. But GETTING to the dive sites is a
    bit rough. Inside the reef/lagoon where we are anchored, it is nice and
    calm; very few local boats zooming around. In Bora Bora, there was always a
    local or other cruiser zooming through the mooring area, their wake rocking
    us around. Here there are just 6 of us, nicely spread out. And if we
    understood correctly, the group of 4 German charter boats will be sailing to
    Raiatea tomorrow.

    Ronald, the current owner of Maupiti Dive Center and Lionel the new guy
    taking over the operation in 1 week, both came in the small dive boat to
    pick us up. No other clients, which is nice for us. Apparently he can take 4
    divers, including him, but just 3 or 4 total is ideal as far as we are
    concerned. We noticed yesterday there was no bimini for shade, so I wore my
    seawater hat & cheap sunglasses for some sun protection.

    Heading out the pass was rougher than when we came in yesterday. The swell
    was larger and choppy so the power boat rose up then slammed down every
    wave. Not comfy. We braced ourselves as best as we could and hung on. The
    ride to the first site was rough, but thankfully only 15 minutes. That’s
    pretty far in this 18 foot runabout. I was happy to backroll in to get down
    below the chaos on the surface. All was calm, all was bright …

    Wow: we though Bora Bora had great visibility. But here we could see for
    miles and miles (sing)…Ok maybe not miles, but really clear, beautiful
    water. AND pristine coral reefs. What an improvement from the other islands
    in French Polynesia! When we asked Ronald later why the reef looks so great
    here compared to Moorea and the other islands, he told us that he personally
    exterminates (with a special process I’ll describe later) hundreds of the
    Crown of Thorns starfish that are coral eaters. An infestation will decimate
    a reef. He focused on the area of his 6-8 designated dive sites. His efforts
    have really paid off. Moorea has been completely decimated, same for Tahaa,
    Raiatea & Bora Bora was pretty bad too.

    Ronald does no shark baiting, so any sightings are completely natural, and
    consequently more rare, since there is nothing to attract sharks to divers.
    We enjoyed our \”Shark Week\” with Gilles in Bora Bora very much. (PLEASE SEE
    OUR VIDEO GALLERY….”FINS OF BORA BORA”). But Ronald\’s philosophy is good. We
    saw two small white tip reef sharks, only about 30 inches long. Scott is
    (trying) to take photos of smaller fish. Close up underwater photography is
    much more challenging than wide angle. Just when he frames the shot, the
    uncooperative critter swims away. Free of a camera, I admire the scenery,
    smiling as I blow bubbles. Lionel led us into a cave that had 5 lion fish
    hanging upside down as they like to do. Sort of bat-like. We saw a few eels,
    one coral-banded shrimp and the usual assortment of tropical fish. The
    variety of texture, shape and size of the coral is a canvas of beauty. The
    swimming creatures bring the pretty picture to life. Fantastic! Hopefully
    when we post the still underwater photos, you’ll get a feel for the
    beautiful expanse of Maupiti’s hard corals.

    The second site was just as lovely as the first. A bit further pounding ride
    in the dive boat, along the motu where the airport runway is located. It was
    a fairly short surface interval since none of us wanted to hang out in the
    bouncing boat. We were greeted with a school of silvery barracuda with
    black stripes. We had to keep an eye on our depth gauges because of the
    short surface interval. We didn\’t readily notice the depth because of the
    water clarity, there was a lot of light and visibility even at 80 feet.
    Ronald guided us up to the shallower part of the reef so we could extend our
    allowed bottom time, without needing a lengthy decompression stop;
    beautiful. We got so enchanted looking at everything and swimming along that
    an hour passed by quickly.

    Voila! Off to a great start for Maupiti Diving. Ronald said the weather
    forecast is for stronger wind & bigger waves Tuesday, so we will go again
    tomorrow, while it is still \”calm\”. Ha! He says he won\’t take divers out if
    it is too rough. There is a manta cleaning station in the pass, he will take
    us there when conditions are right (incoming tide). It is nice that we are
    not on any fixed schedule, so can just relax & enjoy.

    Cindy & Scott

  • Passage to Maupiti…..

    Dear F&F,

    Always a bit anxious the night before heading to a new place, I woke up more
    than an hour before my 5:15 a.m. alarm. At 5:30 a.m. it was raining and
    still too dark to see due to cloud cover, so we lingered in a bed a bit
    longer. We cast off the morning with just a drizzle & enough daylight to see
    by 6:15 a.m. I had taken a Bonine early and strapped on the trusty A.W.Z.
    (Annoying Wrist Zapper). Good thing because outside the reef of Bora Bora
    the swell was abeam (hitting the boat sideways), 4-6 feet high. The wind was
    from the south, NOT what was predicted & NOT the recommended direction for
    going into the pass at Maupiti. But it is only a 28 mile trip and we decided
    to just go and see how the entry looked. Willing to turn around and head
    back to Bora Bora if we were closed out.

    Since the ride was not that comfy, I took a 2nd bonine at 8 am which helped..
    If I did any close focus activities like frying eggs or washing the dishes I
    felt marginal. But as long as stayed outside and looked out toward the
    island I was ok. The clouds & rain were intermittent. We had good
    information on how to approach the pass and what to look for. The buoys and
    navigation markers were accurate and really helped. My surfer dude husband
    waited until after a set and then full throttle on in. No problem! It was
    not as narrow as some passes we’ve entered and no breaking surf in the
    opening, so it was A-Ok. Once we were through the “crux” we could relax and
    enjoy the ride.

    Maupiti is like a mini Bora Bora. A high island, surrounded by motus (small
    outlying islands) and fringing reef. As we were motoring in the well marked
    channel to the anchoring area, the owner of Maupiti Dive Center, Ronald who
    we\’d talked to by phone & email came zooming up. He had one client , a guy
    from Arizona of all places, and was heading out for a dive. We told him we
    wanted to dive the next day. He agreed to pick us up at 8:30 a.m.

    We anchored in the sandy lagoon between town & a motu. We get some
    protection from the prevailing wind & sea anchored behind the motu. We can
    see one pension there has two very tall wind generators to provide some
    power.

    After lunch and a nap, we woke up to see 4 more catamarans and 1 monohull
    anchored near us!

    Jerome & Natalie (s/v Na Maka) with their 3 boys arrived later and anchored
    by the motu just left of the pass entry.

    The group of 4 charter boats are on vacation from Germany. We stopped in our
    dinghy to say hello. The group organizer has been here before and gave us a
    tip of where to land the dinghy.

    A water taxi boat for the airport, which is on a motu, was docked. We asked
    the Maupiti man if we could tie our dinghy under his line, which is standard
    procedure. He said no and directed us to paddle over to a very shallow area
    (had to raise the engine to not drag bottom) and tie to the balcony railing
    of a small building. We didn’t argue and did as instructed. Later when we
    returned, we got a good laugh that the cleat left with the water taxi! It
    was not screwed permanently into the dock for everyone’s use. It was his
    portable cleat which he took with him when he left.

    We got to the post office after closing time, but the very nice just French
    post mistress (Dominique) stayed to sell us WiFi access cards. So we still
    have connectivity! Scott had tried Winlink which wasn\’t very good, so if the
    WiFi works we will get faster connections. He got out on Sailmail ok. The
    postal worker explained to us that Monday is a holiday, so we were lucky to
    catch her for the WiFi card today, otherwise not possible to purchase until
    Tuesday. She also kindly gave us a ride to Ronald’s house. He is in the
    process of selling the dive center to another French couple who are already
    there staying with them at their rental house. We all chatted, had a cup of
    coffee. We asked about the sites. They are proud that they do not do
    zoo-type shark feeding. All encounters are natural. The owners to be, Lionel
    (Lee-o-nel) and Crystal (Crees-tal), are very nice and their English is good
    enough. It is just a coincidence of timing that we will have the opportunity
    to dive with both of these dive guides in the transition of the sale of the
    dive center.

    It was a pretty long walk back from their house to town. Lots of kids on
    bicycles and adults on mopeds. There were a more spontaneous friendly
    greetings than we\’ve experienced on other French Polynesian islands. There
    are about 6 pensions (bed & breakfast), no resorts or tourist development.
    I think the local people are very proud of Maupiti and happy to have
    visitors. The four other German boats had their dinghies tied up by ours
    when we got back. We all walked to the market. Just a scouting visit, I
    don\’t really need anything yet. Scott bought some postcards. Some of his ham
    radio buddies have requested a postcard from where he is. It\’s called a QSL
    card, proof that someone spoke to you on the radio from your stated
    location.

    Can’t wait to get in the water tomorrow!
    Cindy & Scott

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES
    TIME: 2010/05/21 21:04
    LATITUDE: 16-26.68S
    LONGITUDE: 152-14.49W
    MARINE: NO
    WIND_SPEED: 7
    WIND_DIR: 153T
    CLOUDS: 75%
    VISIBILITY: 20
    BARO: 1014
    AIR_TEMP: 32.2C
    COMMENT: Beach House – ANCHORED – Maupiti Island. Pass entry wasn\’t bad at all….1-2 meter swell SSE.

  • Vincent & Clark\’s \”Ship\’s Log\”…..

    Dear F&F,

    VINCENT & CLARK\’S \”Ship\’s Log\”

    Two weeks ago, we were on a different planet. At least, it felt like it on
    the other side of the world, where the oceans are pacific and the Southern
    Cross visible amongst funnily shaped constellations. We sailed away in every
    possible way. From our urban Parisian society to the Society Islands. We
    traded the roll of our daily routine for another kind of roll, and the
    fishing for jobs for the job of the fish, which basically means swimming
    nonchalantly and colorfully warm waters. We owe the discovery of French
    Polynesia to the conjunction of a dream, a promise and an opportunity. The
    dream has come true. It is our dear friends, Cindy & Scott, who made it a
    lifetime project and an adventure for two to sail around the world onboard
    their 51-foot catamaran named “Beach House”. The promise was ours to them,
    made exactly 6 years ago during the maiden voyage of “Beach House” on May
    20, 2004 in Sete, that we would meet them someday, somehow, somewhere and
    share their dream. The opportunity was this year. Clark & I found our selves
    stranded away, unanchored in the troubled waters of unemployment, but clung
    to the buoyant feeling that those times of change are actually likely to
    open new perspectives and rise new suns. The contemplation of the sun\’s
    course, from golden rise to golden set, was actually spectacular; and
    although we have certainly missed some great TV shows, as Calvin and Hobbes
    would certainly agree, we have bathed in this very appreciation of slowness,
    wordlessness and natural harmony every single day of our week on the boat
    from April 26 to May 4.

    Today, we feel lucky and so thankful to our Hosts for the dream vacation
    they offered us. And, from time to time, our bodies bequeath us the gentle
    memory of the swell. Living on a boat is about inhabiting space in both
    literal and figurative senses: making it a perfectly arranged habitat, where
    everything has its designated, practical and to-be-remembered place for the
    sake of comfort and, in the same time, making it a Home. We moved in to
    Cindy and Scott\’s boat for a week. We shared their home and intimate space,
    floating between two infinites. And we very rapidly felt like home, in the
    most natural way. It is an understatement to say that we felt warmly
    welcomed, as we were allocated the left floater, The Guest Room (now rated 5
    sea stars) with queen size bed and both natural and artificial breezing.
    Cindy and Scott simply put us at ease.

    An evidence quickly strokes our minds. We were on vacation for a week
    (although officially doing research for job opportunities abroad as stated
    to the French administration). But Scott and Cindy were not. Living on a
    boat is their daily way of life since 2007 with no scheduled ending. That is
    quite a bold decision to make. And as we have observed during our stay, it
    is all about fixing things and it is a lot of work. Whether at anchor or
    sailing in full sail between islands, maneuvering and maintaining a
    high-tech boat like Beach House represents considerable and constant
    efforts. I must shamefully concede that my contribution was mostly
    observation and very little participation, whereas Clark did contribute with
    a lot of winching and hoisting (ya! I know my sailing vocabulary!) and he
    enjoyed it. Well, it was not quite an ordinary week for Cindy & Scott since
    our presence on the catamaran carried its own distraction and conveyed more
    occasions for visiting the islands, drinking cocktails and chitchatting.
    Last time we had seen C&S was at our California wedding at the Del Coronado
    Hotel in July 2008, almost 2 years ago. What a great time! So many things to
    catch up on!

    Don\’t count on me to give you any technical details on the boat. I know she
    (how weird is the English language to designate a ship like a girl!) is a
    catamaran and 51-foot long. I know she is both motor and wind propelled and
    so very high tech that she can calculate the sea depth automatically and GPS
    position herself on the inner and outer screens. I also know she pitches in
    the most exquisite way when another boat passes by. But most important, I
    know you can enjoy the deep sea wind when standing aft during a crossing
    between islands or gaze at the south hemisphere stars and a bright milky way
    when laying on her roof. These are actually parts of the boat where you can
    find intimacy and solitude, as surprising as it sounds. We never felt
    confined or restricted. On the contrary, the immensities of the sky and the
    sea surrounded us all the time and allowed our minds to wander and evade.
    And especially when anchored, we could dive any time we wanted into the 28
    C° (84 Fahrenheit) waters. I spent hours contemplating the silver surface of
    the ocean, the celestial moods, the solar dance and read four spellbinding
    books during our stay on the boat: (Sad Tropics by Claude de levi-Strauss;
    Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro, The Clear Room, an essay on photography
    by Roland Barthes and The Desert by Pierre Loti).

    This is my very definition of a vacation. It is about letting go, changing
    minds, breaking habits, moving slowly, enjoying good things, evading &
    dreaming, spending time with good friends. Guess what a typical day was?

    5:00 a.m. Imagine waking up at before the sun. First dip in the tropical
    waters. Opportunities for a photographers eye when the early morning light
    dresses up the lazy clouds in dazzling colors.

    6:00 a.m. First breakfast of eggs or tropical fruits and flax seeds with
    coffee with vanilla flavor (from the vanilla farm on Huahine Island).

    8:00 a.m. Busy bees occupations for our hosts, while I read or dive from the
    boat. Boat maneuvers to find the perfect anchor in a charming bay.

    10:00 a.m. Second breakfast of fruity oatmeal. Then scuba diving including
    conversation with lemon sharks for the bold versus snorkeling and close
    encounters with angels, butterflies, trumpets, anemones, surgeons, parrots,
    triggers and other strangely named sea critters for the beautiful (have you
    not noticed my tan?). Or tour of the island onboard an air conditioned
    rental car.

    12:20 Lunch on the island including pina colada cocktails and an unplanned
    bump into Kurt Russell and Goldie Hawn! Several gorgeous points of views
    over the bays, the lagoons and the island vegetation and as many photo ops.

    2:00 p.m. Siesta. Reading.

    4:00 p.m. Swim or snorkel or dive.

    5:00 p.m. Cocktail hour. Perfectly cooled white wine (Blanc de Blanc JP
    Chenet).

    6:00 p.m. Night is here. Creative dinner in bowls by Cindy. The art of
    making a master dish with almost nothing. Explosion of taste (like in the
    movie Ratatouille!

    7:00 p.m. Herb tea and dark chocolate.8:00 p.m. Star gazing on the rooftop,
    singing \”Some Enchanted Evening\” from South Pacific. How appropriate!

    8:30 p.m. Nighty night and sweet dream in constant swell. What a day I had
    today? Quoting Barbra Streisand\” Just gorgeous! Dites qu avez-vous vu?
    asks the French poet Charles Baudelaire in my favorite poem? \”Le Voyage\”
    which translates \”What did you see?\” We saw lush that run on dramatic rocks
    of ageless basalt, and the trees of bread, and their tasty fruits fall in
    sounder shock. We saw diving birds like the frigate flocks. And a school of
    fish with their puffy heads. The infinite sky, the infinite sea Mirror
    their faces, vast and versatile, While at aft we stare, or at stern we glee..

    Scott is hands on the helm and here comes Cindy, with her perfect mood and
    her sunny smile. The divers have talked to the lemon sharks, eighty feet
    below, where the light is rare but the coral sparks. I keep myself in
    shallow waters, surprising angels, named after a lark. We have seen islands,
    their wild side unlaced. We have seen lagoons, turquoise green or blue.
    Nothing was too loose or nothing to waste. All quality time with vanilla
    taste. To The Boat Boy and his Admiral too, we say, Merci mille fois, that
    we translate in sweet Polynesian tongue: Mauruuru!

    From the boat, you get the best possible perspective on Huahine, Raiatea,
    Tahaa and Bora Bora, the four leeward islands of the Society Archipel we
    discovered during our Voyage. These luxuriant islands with terrific volcanic
    rocks rising over the magnificent shades of blue are simply spectacular. One
    of the most memorable moments was to get to Bora Bora sailing full sail
    across the Pacific. From a distance of 50 kilometers we could already
    glimpse the fade silhouette of its famous peaks, before they disappeared
    under the heavy sky. The closer we got, the more of the island body was
    revealed, laid across the horizon after a vastness of dark twinkling waters..
    And suddenly we could distinguish a stain of luminescent blue forming a
    perfect pool at the feet of the island. It was getting bigger and bigger. It
    was iridescent and somehow magical as the colors dont mix, delineating
    radical frontiers of intensity and beauty. As if to extend the pleasure, we
    circled the island to find the only entrance to the lagoon through the coral
    barrier, leaving the red buoy portside. Then the dolphins appeared from
    nowhere, answering my secret call and they welcomed us and they let us in.
    Nana Bora Bora. Hello Gorgeous. Welcome to paradise. Thank you again, Cindy
    & Scott, for this amazing sailing experience that took us to the most
    beautiful lagoon in the world. A part of us remains on Beach House. We wish
    you a safe trip on your continuous exploration of new seas and new shores.
    And we make you another promise: We will meet again in Australia.

    Love from Paris, Clark & Vincent

  • Vincent & Clark\’s \”Ship\’s Log\”…..

    Dear F&F,

    VINCENT & CLARK\’S \”Ship\’s Log\”

    Two weeks ago, we were on a different planet. At least, it felt like it on
    the other side of the world, where the oceans are pacific and the Southern
    Cross visible amongst funnily shaped constellations. We sailed away in every
    possible way. From our urban Parisian society to the Society Islands. We
    traded the roll of our daily routine for another kind of roll, and the
    fishing for jobs for the job of the fish, which basically means swimming
    nonchalantly and colorfully warm waters. We owe the discovery of French
    Polynesia to the conjunction of a dream, a promise and an opportunity. The
    dream has come true. It is our dear friends, Cindy & Scott, who made it a
    lifetime project and an adventure for two to sail around the world onboard
    their 51-foot catamaran named “Beach House”. The promise was ours to them,
    made exactly 6 years ago during the maiden voyage of “Beach House” on May
    20, 2004 in Sete, that we would meet them someday, somehow, somewhere and
    share their dream. The opportunity was this year. Clark & I found our selves
    stranded away, unanchored in the troubled waters of unemployment, but clung
    to the buoyant feeling that those times of change are actually likely to
    open new perspectives and rise new suns. The contemplation of the sun\’s
    course, from golden rise to golden set, was actually spectacular; and
    although we have certainly missed some great TV shows, as Calvin and Hobbes
    would certainly agree, we have bathed in this very appreciation of slowness,
    wordlessness and natural harmony every single day of our week on the boat
    from April 26 to May 4.

    Today, we feel lucky and so thankful to our Hosts for the dream vacation
    they offered us. And, from time to time, our bodies bequeath us the gentle
    memory of the swell. Living on a boat is about inhabiting space in both
    literal and figurative senses: making it a perfectly arranged habitat, where
    everything has its designated, practical and to-be-remembered place for the
    sake of comfort and, in the same time, making it a Home. We moved in to
    Cindy and Scott\’s boat for a week. We shared their home and intimate space,
    floating between two infinites. And we very rapidly felt like home, in the
    most natural way. It is an understatement to say that we felt warmly
    welcomed, as we were allocated the left floater, The Guest Room (now rated 5
    sea stars) with queen size bed and both natural and artificial breezing.
    Cindy and Scott simply put us at ease.

    An evidence quickly strokes our minds. We were on vacation for a week
    (although officially doing research for job opportunities abroad as stated
    to the French administration). But Scott and Cindy were not. Living on a
    boat is their daily way of life since 2007 with no scheduled ending. That is
    quite a bold decision to make. And as we have observed during our stay, it
    is all about fixing things and it is a lot of work. Whether at anchor or
    sailing in full sail between islands, maneuvering and maintaining a
    high-tech boat like Beach House represents considerable and constant
    efforts. I must shamefully concede that my contribution was mostly
    observation and very little participation, whereas Clark did contribute with
    a lot of winching and hoisting (ya! I know my sailing vocabulary!) and he
    enjoyed it. Well, it was not quite an ordinary week for Cindy & Scott since
    our presence on the catamaran carried its own distraction and conveyed more
    occasions for visiting the islands, drinking cocktails and chitchatting.
    Last time we had seen C&S was at our California wedding at the Del Coronado
    Hotel in July 2008, almost 2 years ago. What a great time! So many things to
    catch up on!

    Don\’t count on me to give you any technical details on the boat. I know she
    (how weird is the English language to designate a ship like a girl!) is a
    catamaran and 51-foot long. I know she is both motor and wind propelled and
    so very high tech that she can calculate the sea depth automatically and GPS
    position herself on the inner and outer screens. I also know she pitches in
    the most exquisite way when another boat passes by. But most important, I
    know you can enjoy the deep sea wind when standing aft during a crossing
    between islands or gaze at the south hemisphere stars and a bright milky way
    when laying on her roof. These are actually parts of the boat where you can
    find intimacy and solitude, as surprising as it sounds. We never felt
    confined or restricted. On the contrary, the immensities of the sky and the
    sea surrounded us all the time and allowed our minds to wander and evade.
    And especially when anchored, we could dive any time we wanted into the 28
    C° (84 Fahrenheit) waters. I spent hours contemplating the silver surface of
    the ocean, the celestial moods, the solar dance and read four spellbinding
    books during our stay on the boat: (Sad Tropics by Claude de levi-Strauss;
    Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro, The Clear Room, an essay on photography
    by Roland Barthes and The Desert by Pierre Loti).

    This is my very definition of a vacation. It is about letting go, changing
    minds, breaking habits, moving slowly, enjoying good things, evading &
    dreaming, spending time with good friends. Guess what a typical day was?

    5:00 a.m. Imagine waking up at before the sun. First dip in the tropical
    waters. Opportunities for a photographers eye when the early morning light
    dresses up the lazy clouds in dazzling colors.

    6:00 a.m. First breakfast of eggs or tropical fruits and flax seeds with
    coffee with vanilla flavor (from the vanilla farm on Huahine Island).

    8:00 a.m. Busy bees occupations for our hosts, while I read or dive from the
    boat. Boat maneuvers to find the perfect anchor in a charming bay.

    10:00 a.m. Second breakfast of fruity oatmeal. Then scuba diving including
    conversation with lemon sharks for the bold versus snorkeling and close
    encounters with angels, butterflies, trumpets, anemones, surgeons, parrots,
    triggers and other strangely named sea critters for the beautiful (have you
    not noticed my tan?). Or tour of the island onboard an air conditioned
    rental car.

    12:20 Lunch on the island including pina colada cocktails and an unplanned
    bump into Kurt Russell and Goldie Hawn! Several gorgeous points of views
    over the bays, the lagoons and the island vegetation and as many photo ops.

    2:00 p.m. Siesta. Reading.

    4:00 p.m. Swim or snorkel or dive.

    5:00 p.m. Cocktail hour. Perfectly cooled white wine (Blanc de Blanc JP
    Chenet).

    6:00 p.m. Night is here. Creative dinner in bowls by Cindy. The art of
    making a master dish with almost nothing. Explosion of taste (like in the
    movie Ratatouille!

    7:00 p.m. Herb tea and dark chocolate.8:00 p.m. Star gazing on the rooftop,
    singing \”Some Enchanted Evening\” from South Pacific. How appropriate!

    8:30 p.m. Nighty night and sweet dream in constant swell. What a day I had
    today? Quoting Barbra Streisand\” Just gorgeous! Dites qu avez-vous vu?
    asks the French poet Charles Baudelaire in my favorite poem? \”Le Voyage\”
    which translates \”What did you see?\” We saw lush that run on dramatic rocks
    of ageless basalt, and the trees of bread, and their tasty fruits fall in
    sounder shock. We saw diving birds like the frigate flocks. And a school of
    fish with their puffy heads. The infinite sky, the infinite sea Mirror
    their faces, vast and versatile, While at aft we stare, or at stern we glee..

    Scott is hands on the helm and here comes Cindy, with her perfect mood and
    her sunny smile. The divers have talked to the lemon sharks, eighty feet
    below, where the light is rare but the coral sparks. I keep myself in
    shallow waters, surprising angels, named after a lark. We have seen islands,
    their wild side unlaced. We have seen lagoons, turquoise green or blue.
    Nothing was too loose or nothing to waste. All quality time with vanilla
    taste. To The Boat Boy and his Admiral too, we say, Merci mille fois, that
    we translate in sweet Polynesian tongue: Mauruuru!

    From the boat, you get the best possible perspective on Huahine, Raiatea,
    Tahaa and Bora Bora, the four leeward islands of the Society Archipel we
    discovered during our Voyage. These luxuriant islands with terrific volcanic
    rocks rising over the magnificent shades of blue are simply spectacular. One
    of the most memorable moments was to get to Bora Bora sailing full sail
    across the Pacific. From a distance of 50 kilometers we could already
    glimpse the fade silhouette of its famous peaks, before they disappeared
    under the heavy sky. The closer we got, the more of the island body was
    revealed, laid across the horizon after a vastness of dark twinkling waters..
    And suddenly we could distinguish a stain of luminescent blue forming a
    perfect pool at the feet of the island. It was getting bigger and bigger. It
    was iridescent and somehow magical as the colors dont mix, delineating
    radical frontiers of intensity and beauty. As if to extend the pleasure, we
    circled the island to find the only entrance to the lagoon through the coral
    barrier, leaving the red buoy portside. Then the dolphins appeared from
    nowhere, answering my secret call and they welcomed us and they let us in.
    Nana Bora Bora. Hello Gorgeous. Welcome to paradise. Thank you again, Cindy
    & Scott, for this amazing sailing experience that took us to the most
    beautiful lagoon in the world. A part of us remains on Beach House. We wish
    you a safe trip on your continuous exploration of new seas and new shores.
    And we make you another promise: We will meet again in Australia.

    Love from Paris, Clark & Vincent

  • Bora Bora Island…..

    Dear F&F,

    MAY 8th-18th

    May 8th – Saturday Keep on Diving

    The two other couples today were fun. An American woman with her Polish
    immigrant husband, now living in Seattle. She looked like and had the
    mannerisms of a younger Meryl Streep, it was amazing! She said she is told
    that all the time. She works as a voice actress: reading audio books, doing
    commercials, etc. The other couple were from Guanajuato, Mexico which was
    one of our off-boat trips that we really loved. We went with the dive boat
    to the resort motu where they are based, so I had one last chance to give
    C&V hugs & kisses. Clark was talking to the Italian honeymooners & she
    reluctantly wrote down our website, teasing that she hates us. It was very
    funny. It has really been a boost to view our life not only through the eyes
    of C&V, but these other divers, vacationers, honeymooners. At the moment I
    feel very light & able to laugh at everything. Even as our refrigerator is
    still misbehaving… We may need to have a new evaporator shipped to Tahiti
    then here. Scott believes that is the solution. Meanwhile there is much good
    diving to do and the toilet project awaits. Scott is editing his underwater
    video footage as I write.

    It continues to be bloody hot, but I am acclimatizing. Yesterday I felt cold
    during the second half of dive #1, the entire surface interval & all of dive
    #2. Today I switched from my 3 mm to my 6 mm wetsuit, put on my cuter mask
    and headband instead of the dorky beanie to be a better dive model. I was
    toasty warm on both dives. Of course I am now still toasty warm, whereas
    yesterday the hypothermia kept me cool all afternoon. I kept thinking, Ahh
    it\’s finally cooler, but when I looked at the thermometer it was 91 outside..
    It was just me. Today it\’s overcast, raining off and on and I feel hot at
    87. C\’est la vie.

    Tonight is a BBQ for the 13 boats moored at the Bora Bora Yacht Club. (Which
    sounds way more grand than it is: just an open air bar.) I will take a 3
    bean salad.

    May 9th Work & May 10th Dive

    After 5 hours yesterday, my Bulldog got our toilet working again! For now
    anyway. I talked him out of an elaborate refrigeration repair that I was not
    convinced was possible, would really work and might keep us stuck here or
    send us back to Tahiti for weeks. I told him I was willing to live without a
    fridge if it died. And even though that would add to the \”camping\” aspect of
    boating, I will have the option of converting the unit in the guest cabin to
    a fridge when we\’ve eaten up the food that is currently frozen. I think
    Scott was relieved to not have to tackle that big job in the field. In New
    Zealand we will have much better resources to parts & technical support. We
    are really out here on our own now. I was so proud of him for fixing the
    toilet. It was multiple problems, not just one easy fix, which is why we
    didn\’t have success before C&V arrived. It is much more civilized to just
    flush the toilet and not have to wrangle with it.

    We did two dives with Gilles this morning. The two Italian guys were in our
    group plus a solo Japanese gal. Another 5 went with dive master Patrick (See
    Bora Bora UNDERWATER Gallery for photos of Patrick’s “motorcycle accident”).
    The gang that went with Patrick are here filming the reality TV show
    Bachelor. They were all in their early 30s. We definitely felt the age gap
    with this young, hip group. They were nice, but so different from us. The
    diving was not as spectacular as some other days, but still enjoyable.

    After lunch and a short nap, we rallied to dive under the boat. The
    propellers and all parts underneath really grow algae fast with the 85
    degree water. We both worked 1 1/2 hours and did a good job. William & Jubee
    (nickname for Julie) invited us onboard s/v Fuerte for happy hour. We all
    hit it off well. Sadly, they will be leaving here soon back to Raiatea where
    they will pick up a honeymoon couple for charter.

    Tomorrow is work day: we must get under our bed to clean out the fuel tank
    gauge that has algae growing on it. Scott will continue the wax job. I need
    to do a lot of interior cleaning. We are watching the weather day by day. We
    are not in a rush to leave, but could jump on to the next island whenever
    there is a good forecast for the trip. We have pre-paid for 3 more days of
    diving with Gilles\’s company, so with the alternate day work/play program it
    will probably be another week, which is fine.

    It continues to be bloody hot. Even submerged for over 3 hours today it
    feels very toasty inside the boat. As soon as I sign off I am rushing down
    to our cabin to enjoy the little air conditioning unit for an hour while we
    run the generator to charge the batteries and make water.

    May 11th

    Scott is bravely waxing the boat section by section. It is a 4 step process..
    First he uses rubbing compound in a slurry to get the oxidation off the
    hull, then washes it off. After it dries, he applies the wax by hand, lets
    it dry and the hardest part is buffing it out by hand. Too difficult at a
    mooring to use a machine and we don’t have a good one anyway. This
    afternoon we attacked the fuel tank under our bed. The digital gauge gave a
    warning message that we have bad fuel in the starboard tank. Sure enough,
    algae is growing in the diesel. We took out, cleaned & dried the sensor.
    Then began the messy process of siphoning the fuel from the tank into 5
    gallon jugs through a filter. I forgot to open the air vent in one tank so
    it overflowed causing about a quart of diesel to go spewing all over our
    bedroom floor and me! Yikes. We persevered siphoning about 40 gallons and
    are letting the 8 x 5 gallon jugs sit overnight for any water/algae/crud to
    settle overnight. Early tomorrow we we will re-filter the fuel and put it
    back in our tanks. We re-installed the gauge & it seems accurate, but we
    won\’t really know until we next top off. We still have to attend to the
    leaky generator oil hose which seems to have multiple pin holes in it. Why?
    We’re not sure, but Scott is going to have a new set of hoses and fittings
    shipped from Wisconsin to our next island, Maupiti and replace the whole
    thing their. The fun never ends. Well the work never ends. The key is to
    just take time for fun regardless.

    I got in a midday snorkel: saw an assortment of beautifully colored clams
    and a really large eel. It helps to cool off so much, even 15 minutes in the
    water. Tomorrow is diving – thank goodness we scheduled every other day to
    play.

    More boats have arrived. The ARC Around the World Rally is passing through.
    They started in Europe or the Caribbean. So far about 5 German boats have
    pulled in. Some seem to have a hoity toity attitude. They\’ll be on their way
    soon enough. They are heading around the world in 18 months. Seems absurd to
    me, constantly on the move but to each their own.

    May 13th

    There are now about 15 other boats at the Bora Bora Yacht Club, plus another
    20+ around the nearby motus. Many are participating in the Tahiti Pearl
    Regatta sailboat race.

    We dinghied to town to get fuel in 8 x 5 gallon jugs. We are hoping some
    fresh fuel will help dilute and fight the algae growth in the diesel. We
    have fuel additive plus lots of filters so should be ok. Scott also waxed
    more of the hulls while I cleaned our interior fans, which is a tedious
    job.

    The generator oil hose leak continues. Scott was on Skype with the tech
    support guys trying to figure out why this hose failure is occurring. Same
    hose that is in the engine rooms, no problem. I got my exercise wiping down
    the oil spill from under the boat where it drains out. Multiple swimming
    trips from the stern with paper towel sprayed with Simple Green to wipe off
    the oil slick.

    Our primary fridge is sadly not keeping up with the heat. Likely bad
    evaporator. The two freezers are working like champs. I am prepared for more
    \”camping\” in that department at any moment.

    While in town, we also went to the market. Not much that needs refrigeration
    but other basics. Tonight I cooked a pack of chicken thighs with rice &
    broccoli. It is crazy hot again over 90. We got in a snorkel before sunset.
    After sunset we had hard rain & wind, just for variety. Scott frequently
    helps out the Pacific Seafarers ham radio network, acting as relay which is
    an important job and fun for him. All the net controllers have become quite
    friendly and appreciate his assistance.

    May 16th – HAPPY ANNIVERSARY TO US!

    We must be having fun, because the past 17 years have flown by! Nothing
    beats celebrating with a couple of great dives.

    The first dive was at a sweet spot with a lot of pretty fish & clams. The
    clams come in such an array of colors & patterns. I am mesmerized by them.
    Scott took some video, but I hope he’ll have a chance to get some close up
    still shots. A couple of eagle rays swam in the distance. Very fun. We only
    had one other American guy with us today. A honeymooner who\’s wife doesn\’t
    dive.

    Today was (possibly) our last day diving with Gilles. We\’ve had 7 days,
    spread out every other day which has worked out great. We went for the 4th
    time to a site that usually has lemon sharks. They are 7-10 feet long, very
    girthy, have beady little eyes & nasty looking teeth. Everything you\’d
    expect a shark to look like. Gilles brought a fish head and hid it under a
    part of the reef. Enough scent to make the sharks circle the area. Scott got
    some great video. I even grabbed the camera so he could swim with them for a
    change. We kind of get desensitized when swimming with sharks, but sometimes
    they\’ll swim right up to your face and you realize \”this thing is wild &
    could bite my face off!\” Thankfully, hopefully, they can discern that we do
    not smell like food. It was totally awesome. Four big beasts for about an
    hour, up close & personal.

    The weather is blustery, not good for making the passage to our next
    destination: Maupiti. We will just watch the conditions day by day. It has a
    narrow, shallow reef & if there are big waves it is too tricky. We may be
    able to dive 1 or 2 nearby sites here on our own, or go again with Gilles if
    we get too stir crazy. Not that we don\’t have plenty to do… Scott has a
    pile of photos and video to edit, which is very time consuming. I helped him
    with shot selection last night. And the every present repairs and
    maintenance. We have issues with the generator oil hose leaking. The
    refrigerator cooling ability is marginal and our main potty once again won\’t
    flush #2. But none of that is a catastrophe. We hope to get the special
    generator hoses shipped out tomorrow. I can live without a fridge if I have
    to. And we can poop in the potty on port.

    A bunch of the boats with the Round the World Rally sailed off to Suwarrow
    today, a Cook Island. It will take them 2-3 days. One American boat is still
    here. A radiologist, wife and grown son from Maine. Apparently she is not
    happy about the fast pace of the rally. I can console her with my sad tale
    of being stuck in Tahiti for 7 months.

    Today is 2 weeks that we are in Bora Bora. This island has a great
    combination of tourist amenities, comfortable mooring, so far the best
    diving of all the French Polynesian islands (Maupiti & Mopelia could yet top
    it), and is a gorgeous setting. We have already been in email contact with
    the dive guy in Maupiti. He thinks the weather may be good enough to cross
    there on Thursday. We need to fuel up and I\’d like another shot at the
    market for produce. May do that tomorrow. It is still hot: 93 today, but
    spending a couple of hours submerged helps a lot.

    May 17th – Fuel & Food

    We had pretty strong winds this morning from the south. It is an
    uncomfortable direction making the boat lie sideways to the swell. I felt
    seasick on the mooring. Didn\’t get the Annoying Wrist Zapper & Bonine quite
    quick enough so they weren\’t as helpful.

    Scott ordered replacement generator oil hoses. Why they are leaking when
    normally they should work 20 years is a mystery. Amsoil will ship to Mike,
    who will ship to Papeete through an agent who will expedite them through
    customs and ship to us in Maupiti. It is always a concern that all goes
    smoothly, but we are likely not to head over there until Thursday and if the
    diving is as good there as here we will stay at least 2 weeks.

    After lunch the wind seemed down so we dashed up to the fuel dock. We left
    our dinghy tied to reserve our mooring because we like that one. Good thing
    too because another wave of boats doing the 18 months around the world rally
    showed up this afternoon. It was more windy up by the fuel dock, we smacked
    into the pier causing minor cosmetic damage. The boat was really jagging up
    & down badly. The fuel station is closed from noon-1:30 p.m. We arrived at
    1:05. I knew it would take Scott and the fuel dock guy some time to fuel up
    both tanks plus the extra cans, so used the opportunity to jump off, walk
    the 10 minutes to the grocery store dragging my cart & bags. No eggs or
    lettuce. Got apples, grapes, cheese, wine, turkey & salami slices & most
    everything else I wanted. Just because I could, I bought a Dove chocolate
    ice cream bar as a treat and ate it as I walked back.

    My timing was good. I knew we\’d need to shove off as soon as the fueling was
    done so the next boat could tie up. There is only space for one at a time.
    Casting off was kind of scary. I was at the helm but did not feel I had good
    control over our house in the wind, so called for Scott to take over. I hate
    it when I freak out in challenging circumstances, but Scott was very sweet
    afterwards, reassuring me that it was a tricky situation and that I should
    not be embarrassed. Tying the boat back up to the mooring and getting the
    dinghy off was another trick, but we did it after a few go arounds.

    I avoided reading/writing until now & am testing out the Phenergan (seasick
    med) with coffee (to prevent drowsiness) seasick cure. I waited 45 minutes
    for it to take full effect & am happy to report that I feel pretty darn
    good. Granted, there is not as much sideways swell. But still, I am glad to
    have options. The weather should be calming down over the next couple of
    days. We want to work on photos and write new Ships Logs, so I really hope
    not to feel seasick. If the conditions on the mooring are crappy, we can
    always take our laptops to the beach bar.

    I would normally go for a snorkel but last night my right ear was bugging me
    plus I had a sore throat. I did an extra vinegar/peroxide rinse of my ears &
    took Zicam. Ears seem ok now but it\’s probably best to keep my head dry for
    a couple of days. Darn.

    May 18th – Media Day

    Scott is editing and posting photos and I have been writing these Ships Logs
    all day. It is sunny with little breeze. The good news is that it is
    comfortable on the mooring & I am not seasick. The bad news is that it is
    hot and hard for me to concentrate for a long time. Scott is more driven for
    these projects than I am. I’d rather be diving!

    Cindy & Scott…..Off to Maupiti Soon!