Archive for July, 2010

The Good Life

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Jul 29 2010

Cook’s Bay, Moorea (Where the first Mutiny on The Bounty was filmed) 29 Jul 2010 17.5020S 149.8192W

I know I left you hanging once again after that last message, but it’s going to be hard to top the eclipse! And we’re still in busy land-life mode, so I won’t even try. We did arrive in Tahiti, spent two weeks, provisioning, doing paperwork, and of course enjoying daily feasts with Frank’s mom and his brother’s family. We even pressed one family member into service (Logan and Kennan’s 11 year-old cousin Mauna), and the five of us are now over in Cook’s Bay. After all of the stunning spots we’ve seen, Moorea is right up there with the best. Maybe we’re a little biased, since both Frank’s daughters and their babies live here. We spent the day with Hina yesterday, and the day with Tehani and their two sons today, and somehow life for us just got better. Both girls look great and both have settled into really comfortable lives here, and so this spot seems to have a special glow. I think there must be no greater joy in life than to see your kids (even your stepkids) satisfied with their lives. After all the complications of teenagerdom, distance, a complex family (us), they’ve made it through to the other side just fine. I will be a happy mom if Logan and Kennan get to the same level of life bliss in 10 years, and Frank will enjoy double that happiness.

My finger is not broken, but still sore enough that it doesn’t like to type, so writing is slow – if only my writing were more concise as a result, instead I’ve practically stopped – any excuse! On that note, know that I think of you all often, and send frequent wishes for keeping your own life bliss.

xoxomo

Totality – Awesome!

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Jul 11 2010

Solar Eclipse Path, 70 miles South of Tahiti 11 Jul 2010 18.7599S 149.1819W

We ended up with perfect weather and visibility, and Frank monitored and adjusted sails all night to get us directly under the center of the path. I truly had no idea how much more impressive a full eclipse would be compared to the partials I’d seen in the past. The three or so minutes of totality were completely spellbinding. The lighting leading up to the eclipse got very eerie with strange crescent shaped shadows all over the cockpit, then very suddenly, the world did in fact go dark, like late dusk or early dawn, with a glowing yellow horizon in all directions. Stars and planets were visible overhead, and the eclipse itself looked like someone was drilling a perfectly round hole in the sky with a circular laser. A puffy cloud passed in front for one of the three or so minutes, but it did not obscure our visibility, instead it made a burst of iridescent colors around the eclipse. Then as suddenly as it all started, a sunbeam exploded us back into a glowing yellow daylight. I truly had the sense that angels were watching down on us, and had come to save us from the sudden darkness.

The entire event lasted almost 3 hours, I could tell a lot more – the kid’s excitement, images of them looking out at the sun and sea wearing the welding helmet, playing with the crescent shadows, projecting dancing crescents with the binoculars (hard to hold binos still on the boat), accounts of historical tricks early explorers used the eclipse for, and cool details Marc Googled for us – but I sprained my finger yesterday, rushing to get a bucket of water to help Frank clean up fish blood from a 4′ Mahi Mahi we caught. A wave came and tried to steal the bucket, almost took the end of my left index finger too! La Garce! The bucket looks more bent than my finger though, so I think I’ll be typing faster again soon.

The planet officially has 4 new coronaphiles! Next one Australia 2012? Hmmm that’s not too far off, nor too far away from here. I’m so glad we didn’t let cabin fever get the better of us, and I’m glad we were able to slow Silver Lining down a bit; she was a little too eager to be leaping and hopping on the moon’s shadow, now I know why!

xoxomo

A Gorgeous day to sail

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Jul 09 2010

North of Raivave, South of Tahiti 9 Jul 2010 23.2307S 147.9134W

It would have been a good day for exploring Raivavae, but it’s an exceptional day for a sail. If it were this beautiful out here every day, we would not be the only boat we’ve seen in over 3 weeks. Well we did see one tanker, just before we arrived in Raivavae on his way from NZ to Panama, he came very close, we chatted and he gave us a nice friendly long loud blast and a bunch of short ones with his mega-horn, that was a thrill (it doesn’t take much out here).

We have blue sky above, a long slow swell from the south that isn’t impacting our comfort, and minimal windwaves from the east. We have 15 knots on the beam, we’re reaching for Tahiti at about 6.5 knots. We’re all in high spirits, and if this weather holds for another 36 hours or so, we’ll have great visibility for that eclipse.

xoxomo

Remember the Eclipse.

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Jul 09 2010

Raivavae, Les Australes 8 Jul 2010 23.8643S 147.6884W

We came very close to taking off this morning. We’ve had mostly rain and/or strong winds since we arrived, so there’s been very little exploring here. We’ve done lots of cleaning and drying out. We’ve tackled a few boat projects (including recaulking the back windows that were leaking on my books). We’ve made good progress in school. We’ve read a lot. And the boys (big and small) have spent lots of time with their computer games. And when rain isn’t actually pouring down, Logan and Kennan run up top to practice their sword fighting or carving seashells with the Dremel. Logan has now listened to some of the radio labs so many times, I think he’ll soon be reciting them for us verbatim. We’re very eager to visit Frank’s family in Tahiti and as of last night we’d had enough! We were sure to be departing this morning, we’d even hauled up the dinghy and it’s engine. But this morning Frank and I both woke up thinking about that eclipse, we looked again at the route, the weather, the schedule, and reminded ourselves, that one of the reasons for staying here through the 9th, was so that we would be at sea, in a good spot to see the eclipse Sunday morning. And if we were to arrive too early in Tahiti, we might not see it (more clouds likely, and more obstacles, mountains, land, trees). We’ve been thinking, talking and dreaming about this eclipse since we thought this adventure up. Originally we’d planned to be in the exact best spot in the Tuamotus for it, but then as we’ve been flowing with the go, it seemed like too big of a driver of where to go and when to go there, given that it was pretty likely to be cloudy. In view of the last couple weeks of rain, it was probably good that we didn’t plan our whole trip around the eclipse. But now we’re oh so close, and the weather report is looking somewhat favorable for clearer skies, and here we are ready to haul anchor early and throw that chance away – all because of a little cabin fever.

So another day today of projects, school, adding Yahtzee and popcorn to break the monotony. The boat is looking/feeling downright shipshape, more ready to go than usual. Stuff is stowed, engine oil’s been changed, fuel filters changed, watermaker filters changed, windows should be watertight now (knock on wood, just in case, the library has been temporarily relocated to a dry spot on the boat). After a little more of the cupboard dance, the pile of stuff on the chart table now has it’s own drawer. The laundry is down to a minimum, and the washing machine no longer has coins stuck in it’s drainpipe, and no longer fills my clothes drawer with water (an incident that came up after the book incident). We’ve stocked up on peaches (easy up easy down, as an Aussie acquaintance of Marc’s once said). A pot of bacon, lentils and delicious taro (the only crop on this island) is cooked and ready for a few sea meals. Seas are looking sloppy after all this weather from all directions – no worries, we’re ready for it! That’s what leaving a day later instead of a day earlier than expected does for you.

We’re off to see the earth darken, or rather see the sea darken, apocalyptically. What could be more fun?

Les Reveils de Tahiti/Moorea – preparer vous, on arrive!

xoxomo

Raivavae So Close and Yet So Far

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Jul 02 2010

Raivavae, Les Australes 30 June 2010 23.8643S 147.6884W

We arrived around 2 in the morning yesterday, slept off the worst of our fatigue, then spent most of the day trying to bring order to chaos on board. Windy weather is keeping us from going ashore – too windy to launch the dinghy (25 knots with gusts above that), and rain is predicted. Winter in the tropics can be unpredictable weatherwise. So we got here a day early spent that day cleaning up the mess, now we wait and hope for better weather. We had lots of rain in the Gambiers, but the dinghy was already in the water, so we’d still venture out to explore and often come back drenched. A few boatbound days, helps us catch up on schoolwork and chores. This last crossing gave us a healthy chores list. We had a little bit of water intrusion in the aft cabin, that I had not noticed until the books went flying out of the shelf. It wasn’t a massive amount of water, but enough to wreak havoc on our reference book shelf, and the foot of our mattress, so I’ve been spending a lot of time trying to set them out to dry, bring them in before squalls, flip the pages on the books with color plates so the pages don’t stick together. It’s been a depressing task, but only one book I had on photography tips is irreparable. Sun yesterday helped dry everything some, today’s grayer weather, is keeping the project indoors. Part of airing out the boat then included some rearranging, to find a semi-temporary safer place once they’re dry. Fixing the leak is a bigger project involving reseating or replacing a couple of the back windows, so we’ll need some time in a calm anchorage with no rain before we can tackle it. I would say it’s a testament to the intensity of the weather of this last crossing, six months of all kinds of weather, and this area had never leaked. Frank says it’s not related, it was beautiful weather for sailing, the seals just give up at some point. Yes water is a big part of the sailing experience, but I prefer it when it stays outside the boat.

Raivavae is lower in altitude than the Marqueses, but there are similar dramatic cliffs, peaks and rock outcroppings, they just start lower down. From the boat, shore looks drier than anywhere we’ve been in the southern hemisphere yet. There are fewer coconut trees than Gambiers and the Tuamotus, but this island does have an outer reef with motus, and some of the same beautiful blue and turquoise waters. From Google earth, it looks like there is a road that traverses over to the other side, which promises some spectacular views, but for now all land activity remains out of reach, watching land out the window is not half bad though. There’s a small round little Motu out my port window that looks different from any we’ve seen so far; not a single coconut tree on it, instead it’s all fuzzy looking with big lacy-leafed trees. Until we can go visit, I have no idea what kind of trees they are.

I’m really enjoying the novel “My Name is Red” by Turkish author Orhan Pamuk. It’s a romance/murder mystery, which takes place in 16th Century Istanbul in a community of miniaturists. My mind is filled with visions of illuminated manuscripts, rich colors, and minute details of Islamic Ottoman life. I get a visual shock when I go from his descriptions of illustrations of bright robed sultans, and leafed or gilded page borders, to look out at the landscape in front of me trending toward blues, greens and grays. The only red visible is a bright red navigational marker – a spar with a red square on top – warning of a coral head below. I’m only about half-way through, but every page is luscious and vivid; the character’s egos, emotions and thoughts are thickly intertwined with descriptions of the process of creating the richly illustrated books, and with descriptions of the stories they tell and how the detail of a scene, the elements rendered, the colors chosen, the character of the brush stroke all contribute to capturing the essence of a moment in a tale. The book is full of philosophical questions about art, ego and spiritual belief. I’m not looking forward to it ending. One of the joys of working with lots of bright people at UCLA, was the great book recommendations everyone gave me before I left, Thanks for this one Diane!

In one chapter it describes how when one sultan would overthrow another, he would have all the artists and painters, cut the books apart, and put them back together in a different order, to change the stories – or where the old sultan’s face was used to depict a traditional hero, he’d have them replace it with his own portrait. Our books on board look like war casualties, strung about the cabin, I may have to have my artists, paint new faces on the fish in our “Audubon Field Guide to Fishes Whales and Dolphins” and I would not be surprised to see Logan’s face appear on his favorite Nudibranch in his guide to “Pacific Coast Nudibranchs.” I’m afraid with our library, it would not be that meaningful to reassemble them to create new books, “The 12 Volt Doctor’s Practical Handbook on Electric Eels,” “Weather Guide for Whales” or “Adolescent Writers Between Pacific Tides?!” Since the pages all now have the wavy texture yellowed color of illuminated manuscripts, maybe we should decorate the boarders with kelp, waves and flying fish, just to perk them up a bit. They are looking a little sad right now.

xoxomo