Giant sand dunes at 90-mile beach |
Thursday, December 31, 2015
Happy New Year!
Wednesday, December 9, 2015
En Zed (NZ)
Hundertwasser toilets in Kawakawa |
They say 'zed' here in New Zealand rather than 'z'. They
also don't measure distances in blocks (think meters) or have brussel sprouts.
Other than little things like that, and if you disregard the obvious British influences (accents, driving on the
left side), being in New Zealand is a lot like being back in the U.S. Among
other things, this means a cornucopia of foodstuffs. Even small convenience stores carry much more
than most of the 'big' stores we have visited over the last few years. The kids were literally running around the
supermarket yelling, 'Look! They have shrimp!
Look! They have broccoli!'
Thursday, November 26, 2015
I don't taste like bacon, therefore I am
It's Day 3 of our passage from Fiji to New Zealand and we have
run out of the quiche we made before we left. We eye each other hungrily. Matt
says, "Don't worry, if you tasted like bacon and cheese, I'd have eaten
you a long time ago." Comforting.
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
Hoarding is good!
Tuesday, October 20, 2015
Local knowledge
When you visit a place like Fiji, where people are so friendly and open, one of the benefits is that you learn things that aren't in the guidebooks. For example, we learned that the Indians (from India) that live here usually burn their dead and let the remaining bones wash into the ocean.
Thursday, October 1, 2015
Life's short and Fiji is great
The beach at Wailagilala Island. |
We're a month or so away from leaving for New Zealand. Our
friend Owen swears that Amelie IV and
we will singlehandedly boost the GDP of New Zealand when we arrive and start buying boat parts and supplies. We have a
long to do list that keeps getting longer, which has set off my usual
hand-wringing about spending so much money when we're not making much.
Tuesday, September 15, 2015
Let them eat (dry) cake
Sand spit in Tonga (only at low tide). The kids played 'Marco Polo' on land. |
Tuesday, September 1, 2015
Would have, could have, should have
We attended a Tongan feast with several friends. We almost missed it because we crossed the international date line |
Matt noticed the other day that our old house resold for almost $150,000 more than we sold it for three and a half years ago. The couple that bought it from us made almost no changes, down to the placement of almost all the furniture and artwork they purchased from us. It was eerie to see the place almost the same as we had left it.
Sunday, August 23, 2015
Niue: It's not the size that matters...
One of the amazing shots taken by Marie-Claude Osterrath of Amelie IV |
Niue is a tiny country that I had never
heard of until we reached the Pacific. In fact, they claim it's the smallest
sovereign nation in the world. The week
we spent there was one we'll never forget. The area is a breeding and migration
area for humpback whales and we saw more whales than we have ever seen before
and will probably see again. They would swim through the anchorage daily and at
night we heard their songs through the hulls of the boat.
Thursday, August 6, 2015
Palmerston Atoll (Cook Islands)
Mark and Conrad with "Bacon". There are no dogs on Palmerston but Bacon is the next best things. He loves being petted. |
Coming into an unfamiliar anchorage at night is one of the
top three "don'ts" if you like keeping your boat in one piece (not certain what the other two are, but probably something like "don't sail into a hurricane while repairing leaking propane lines using a match as a light source" or something similar). So as
we approached Palmerston at 11:30 p.m. we considered drifting in the lee of the
island until daylight. After talking to our friends on Seabbatical, who had arrived several hours earlier, we decided to try anchoring, especially since the moon
was scheduled to be up as we arrived. After five days at sea, a relatively good
night's rest was too tempting.
Tuesday, July 28, 2015
Perspective
These manta rays in Bora Bora were about 14' from wingtip to wingtip. |
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
It just goes to show, you can always find something to complain about
Snorkeling in Bora Bora. |
Monday, July 13, 2015
Amazing experiences, all the time--um, no
'To our tormentors' |
Tuesday, July 7, 2015
Hanging out in Tahiti
We have a ton of great shots of Mark being mauled by the very tame stingrays in Moorea. He was remarkably unphased by having stingrays all over him (there's a great shot of one on his face on our Facebook page). Conrad, on the other hand, was having none of it.
Sunday, June 21, 2015
'Sea'-nile
Perry with our Dreamsicle-colored spinnaker. Photo courtesy of Marie-Claude Osterrath. |
Sunday, May 17, 2015
Incidental costs
Beach barbecue with Steven on (Tahuata) |
I could use the lack of internet as an excuse for not updating the blog but the truth is that there is internet for a fee in many places. In the two and a half weeks since our Pacific crossing, I have felt very unmotivated to post anything. We have been spending our days enjoying the towering volcanic spires, struggling with French, and savoring the flavorful fruit that bursts from every other tree. We also met some new kid boats (Miss Behaving and Seabbatical, who hung out with Amelie in the Galapagos) that Mark and Conrad (and we) have enjoyed hanging with.
Saturday, May 2, 2015
Crossing the Pacific--We'll Take Boring
This excerpt from Conrad's schoolwork sums up our trip
pretty well:
Write three sentences about what you did last weekend. Then underline all the past-tense verbs.
We sailed and sailed some more. We got really bored. We kept sailing.
Look around the room. Write three sentences about everything that's happening now. Underline all the present-tense verbs.
We are sailing. We are bored. We are doing school.
Thursday, April 9, 2015
Friday, April 3, 2015
Bella Isabela (The Galapagos, Part 2)
Holy penguins Batman! |
Monday, March 23, 2015
Isla San Cristobol and Isla Santa Cruz (Galapagos, Ecuador)
San Cristobol is home to a huge colony of sea lions. |
Thursday, March 12, 2015
Panama to Galapagos
We beached our boat at Isla Espiritu Santo in Las Perlas. The tides are so big that you can drive your boat onto one of several flat sand beaches at low tide, do your out-of-water tasks, and then wait for the tide to come back up.
Tuesday, March 3, 2015
Now we wait...
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
If I only had a brain...
So Ecuador is out. We noticed that a couple of our passports expire in a year. Since most places require that you have a passport that will be valid for at least 6 months from your arrival and there are not a lot of U.S. Embassies in the South Pacific, we decided to have ours renewed in Panama City. When we broke the news to Conrad and Mark that we had changed our mind yet again (we had also recently changed plans about Peru), Conrad happily drew this parallel: "It's like we're the Scarecrow in the Wizard of Oz--it's like we don't have a brain!" From the mouths of babes...
These hamburger seed pods are much coveted in the Caribbean. They have greatly challenged my minimalist aspirations. I couldn't stop picking them up... |
More hoarding... |
Perlas has amazing beaches, though they're a lot smaller at high tide. |
Black sand had the consistency of flour. Yup, that's all they're wearing. |
We got to join up with some kid boat friends again. Yay! |
Conrad and Mark are glad to
be back to beaches and spend their time digging the Biggest Holes Ever and
playing in the surf. We have spent what seems like an inordinate amount of time
scraping the bottom in preparation for The Galapagos, where they are reportedly
very strict about bringing in any extraneous critters. I experienced 2 tiny
crabs in my ear canal, one of which was in there for several hours before I
realized it might not be residual water (it saw the literal light at the end of
the tunnel and jumped out when Matt shone a flashlight into my ear). We have
seen fishing bats, giant grasshoppers, and a tiny octopus that attached to
Matt's wetsuit after cleaning the boat.
Fish eating bats. |
Tuesday, February 10, 2015
Panama City, Panama (not Florida)
Whenever we do a Google search on 'Panama City', it brings up pages relating to the town in Florida. It must be our use of English rather than Spanish.
A new watch battery for $3. The eye-piece is mounted in a plastic soda bottle cap. Gotta love the ingenuity. |
Tuesday, February 3, 2015
Going to the flipside
We made it across the Panama Canal with no damage to the
boat or crew. In some ways, it is a relatively straightforward process, but
things do occasionally go wrong so it's a relief to be finished. We are very
glad that we had experienced sailors as line handlers. Originally, we were
planning to have as line handlers a non-sailing Brazilian family (a father,
mother, and their 19-year old daughter), but they backed out. Instead we had our
friend Mark from Amelie V, along with
Huzar and Patricia from Indra, a boat
we met while anchored in The Flats. Having sailors was invaluable because there
was enough going on without having to explain how cleats work or how lines
should be led, much less worrying about someone who isn't used to walking
around on a boat.
Thursday, January 22, 2015
Preparing to cross the Panama Canal
Anchored in the Rio Chagres |
Thursday, January 15, 2015
Isla Linton and Portobelo
After the San Blas, we had a very unpleasant sail over to Isla Linton. The winds were still high and the seas were filled with 10-foot swells. We caught a mahi but Matt got seasick (for the first time on this boat) when he tried to fillet it on the side deck because the seas were too big to have him on the transom. Apparently the combination of the leftover head cold and having his head sideways was too much.
Tuesday, January 13, 2015
Getting out of Dodge
Boogie boarding boat buddies |