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Great Mercury Island

January 01, 2015 - 14:44
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:position 36 36s 175.46e Great Mercury Island December 17 Janet “Cheers,” Our glasses clink.
We gaze around Mercury Cove. We can finally see it in its full glory, the green grass of the fields, the Christmassy red and green of the Pohutukawa reaching out across the sand, the sky blue sea, all these features till now only seen in muted greys through curtains of mist and rain.
“Its like life has been mostly in black and white since we left Tauranga, and now its in full colour.” I say to David.
Maybe my mood will go from grey to full colour too. The weather had been gloomy inside the boat too. A valid perennial bone of contention between us is my lack of sailing ability, how I avoid some of the heavy work outside, and the anxiety I get around this. This creates conflict and makes me feel like crap because I know I should be dealing with these things. 5500 sailing miles – I should have nailed these skills by now. Time to step up. I’ve made a plan, listed all the things I need to come up to speed with, even maybe one day become good at enough to become a reliable crew member. It’s a long list. I’m sure Titus, the skipper of the boat I raced on at Seaview, will be nodding as he reads this. I know from the few deck skills I have come to grips with that I get enormous satisfaction from the achievement.
This sailing business doesn’t come to me intuitively, not like cooking where I have an innate understanding of it, and know without thinking what I need to do, naturally fine tuning things as I go. So with pen and paper in hand I gazed at the mast, at first a mess of lines, fat blue ones, skinny blue, clean red, dirty red, some I know like the main halyard and others I haven’t used like the spinnaker ones. I draw and label them all to help cement their purposes in my brain.
Next task I tackled was the fuel system, all those hoses and taps, the configurations of which I need to alter when we change the supply from the aft diesel tank to the front one. All the more complex because the engine doesn’t use all the fuel that comes in but has an over flow that has to be directed to one or other tank, and this is to be watched to ensure it doesn’t overflow into the cockpit. Thanks to the diesel engine course I did last year I could look at the engine where the fuel hoses go in and out and know that I was looking at fuel filter and understand what it does. I used to look at this metal monster of an engine and have no idea of its inner workings, and just walked away.
Other tasks on my list include reefing in high winds (I can do it at anchor in no wind!), the front end of the anchoring, deployment of storm sails and getting really good at launching the dinghy off the foredeck. I’ll be a more competent crew member and we’ll be a happier ship.
The next day dawns sunny and warm. We spread our wet salty sailing gear on deck to dry and open all the hatches. I lower our sweet little dinghy into the water, the third we have owned on this vessel (See Navire Pacific Journey for the story of the loss of the original one and the making of the replacement in Tonga). Today I do this almost entirely unaided, another of my deck-skills goals. Using the spinnaker halyard I winch the dinghy up and over the rail without having it bash into anything. It’s hovering in the air out to the side of the boat but my arms aren’t long enough to hold it out from the hull and slowly release the halyard on the winch to allow the dinghy to gently land on the sea. I call for assistance.
We row across the little inlet we are parked in, right outside the twin mansions of Fay and Richwhite, who own this whole island but deign to let us mere yachties land and wander around on its shores. “BJ’s the name,” the farm manager greets us as we land and he introduces us to the island. BJ is from Ngawi and has bought his family up to warmer climes. He likes remote places.
“How often do you get off the island?” David asks.
“Oh yeah, we go to New Zealand every so often,” says BJ.
“I’ve got 2 bars!” “Well I’ve got three,” retorts David. His phone is much older than mine but it occasionally gives him the satisfaction of better reception.
Like rabid teenagers we gaze at our phone screens as we climb one of the island’s golden hills. We’d packed up phones and laptop and dongles so we could get an internet hit. One of our highs is checking the blog site. Last time we looked at YIT we had 78 followers.
“I’ve got five emails,” “I’ve got eleven.” We are not competitive understand.
That urge momentarily sated we drop down the other side of the hill to the eastern coast of the island.
You’ve seen this picture on a postcard. Gnarled Pohutukawa reaching down to the white sand, just touching the deep blue Pacific Ocean lapping the shore. Well, we are there. This is my first ever visit to a Coromandel beach. Avert your eyes for a moment. We have our first swim of the trip. Naked. Standing on the beach I love the softness of the air on my skin, the warm breeze caressing it. I feel the sun’s warmth, its rays touching parts that haven’t seen daylight for many a year. We wade into the water, scaring off the skates that are basking in the warm shallows. I’m in first.
Cabin moments “The butter’s getting soft.” Later in the day David has ventured into the galley, making us fried bananas, lemon curd and cream. There is a famous early English navigation saying about sailing to the Americas. You sail south till the butter melts then turn right to cross the Atlantic and catch the favourable winds and currents. We have adapted this to the southern hemisphere, travelling north we know we are near the tropics when the butter starts to melt.
December 20 David looks up from his keyboard where his vision has been focused since the moment he woke. “You can’t put those up, its not Christmas yet.” I’m decorating the cabin with our half dozen Christmas ornaments and a few filaments of tinsel. “David – its December 20th, the rest of New Zealand put them up in November.” “Oh, I suppose,” he said, and went back to typing his blog.
We barely know what day or date it is, let alone that Christmas is around the corner.

Tuhua to Slipper

December 30, 2014 - 13:33
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Tuhua Island to Slipper Island By the time you get this you will no doubt be recovering from the excesses of Christmas, the joys and maybe traumas of the day. I am a week or so behind with this blog posting - life is surprisingly busy at sea.
Tuhua Island – four hours sail north of Tauranga December 11-13 We woke to a dawn chorus, the boat gently swinging on her anchor, not hindered by bow and stern lines firmly attached to a marina. We too are less tied to the land. Yesterday we learned that Turners had sold our car. It felt liberating, no more WOF, insurance, registration, or expensive repairs (for the moment we’ll just overlook the fact we own a boat which eclipses all those factors).
Time to explore this new island. We lowered the dinghy into the water. I rowed as if I’d had one too many vodkas for breakfast. I hadn’t rowed for so long my coordination had evaporated, on some strokes my left oar missing the water altogether! This skill should be imprinted in my DNA. I grew up in Island Bay with a dinghy on the beach, the island my playground. I accepted David’s offer of rowing tuition.
The dinghy nosed up the beach. I leapt into the water to grab the bow and pull it to shore. I didn’t gasp, my toes didn’t immediately go numb. Yes!! “Right, let’s carry the dinghy up the beach,” suggested David, pointing at the high tide mark several metres up the sand. “Sure,” I took hold of my side of the dinghy. Nothing happened. I sent instructions to my arms and back again, nothing there. We struggled up the beach, my side of the dinghy mostly dragging in the sand. And this is without the outboard engine. Was it only four years ago I could carry my side of our much heavier dinghy in Tonga, engine and all? This evaporation of strength has not been an isolated experience. It is frightening how much muscle tone you lose when working in a sedentary academic job. Climbing the mast, I can barely haul myself up the first rungs, let alone hang on up there for more than a few minutes. Pulling in the sheets, I can barely winch the sail right in. But watch this space, I’ll have biceps to envy (for a middle-aged woman), before this trip is out. We meandered along paths through forests of ancient Pohutukawa taking one of the shorter walks to a lighthouse above the bay where we are moored. It was good to stretch our legs.
As we stood atop the outermost cliff on a promontory above the bay I spied Westerly sail in to the bay Great, we’d only met one other boat so far, and here they were. I start thinking about what I will serve with drinks.
Slipper Island Coromandel Janet December 13-16 We could have stayed at Tuhua for a week and explored the island’s crater and lakes, but the wind was forecast to shift and the bay would no longer be a sheltered haven. We headed north to Slipper Island on a grey oily calm sea, visited by two dozen dolphins who played with our bow, almost caressing it as they darted in and out. Four hours later we arrived and tied up to a mooring. The weather was not looking good.
“If the mooring breaks we start the engine. We can motor back into the bay and try to reanchor, otherwise we motor up and down the channel all night taking watches.” David outlines our emergency plan for the night.
We are on a mooring we don’t know at Slipper Island, part way up the Coromandel Peninsular, and its gusting 35 knots, gale force. It’s okay during the day but now night is falling and we are talking about doing an “anchor watch” where we take turns at staying up and keeping an eye on our position. We are trying to set the radar and GPS alarms that would alert us if we move too far. One good thing about his anchorage is that we ahv a long way to go before we hit rocks…If our mooring breaks, and we end up on the rocks, our trip would be over in a moment.
It’s raining, again. We’ve been stuck inside all day, lurching drunkenly around the boat, swaying in the Easterly swell, which wraps itself around the island. We light the diesel heater, wrote and played Rummy Tiles.
“Just like Wellington, only warmer,” I grumble to David, who looks up from his computer, nods then goes back to writing his blog.
To console myself I cook. Smells of cinnamon, lemon zest and star anise permeate the cabin as I make fig paste. Then I transform Christmas cake, laced with rum, into chocolate-coated truffles for a Boxing Day BBQ with friends in Auckland.

Less Choice Than You Might Think (David)

December 24, 2014 - 19:00
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We counted ourselves lucky to find a suitable weather window within a week of being ready to leave
Wellington. We've been on this voyage for three weeks and most of our movements have been
determined for us by the weather.

The Wairarapa Coast passage was dominated by two things. Foremost was to put this fickle and
dangerous part of the coast behind us. The other was 'getting our sea legs'. We were all a little clumsy
and unsteady on our feet. Janet, true to form, was unsteady also in her gut.

Tauranga to Tuhua

December 23, 2014 - 22:42
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Tauranga to Tuhua
Janet, December 10
PICS: Tuhua
Xmas cake and tea & decoration
Photo of D with margarita

“Two clicks to starboard,” calls a voice from the cabin.
I cross the cockpit and push twice on the right-hand button of the autopilot, steering the boat two degrees closer to our course.
I look at the sky, vast, unencumbered by land, unlike Wellington Harbour which is surrounded by hills that play havoc with the sky-scape.

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