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Taha'a |
Continuing the tradition we started last year, we present to you our Epilogue 2020, where we venture to answer some questions and reflect on our year’s experiences, while hopefully giving some insight on what we’ve learned and how we want to continue the adventure into next year. What makes 2020 so incredibly interesting is that it didn’t turn out as intended for any of us. We have all needed to adapt, adjust and modify our plans in some very unusual ways. Just this morning while walking around the shopping epicenter of Lahaina, newly opened to tourism and freshly populated with bright and colorfully masked families all doing regular activities in a highly irregular way, I remarked at how astonishing this new world of social distancing still seems to us, as we have largely avoided touristed areas until now. And it reminded me also, how we saw a glimpse of this surreal world watching Asian travelers in India, the sub-continent, merely a few years ago, who always seemed to be wearing masks.
Reflecting back to this time last year, S/V india was freshly launched from the Varadero Boatyard on the popular Dutch Island of Aruba to its adjacent Marina. David and I had celebrated our holidays earlier in December by traveling to the U.K. to meet our new granddaughter, Clarissa and new grandson, Rupert, and to spend time with our family there before stopping in Charleston to visit family and friends on our return. How truly thankful we are, especially in retrospect, that we could spend that special time together. We spent our actual Christmas covered in bottom paint and dust in the shipyard preparing india for our Pacific Passage in what looks to be an annual haul-out and check up that we’ve learned pays dividends in safety and minimizing maintenance and potential problems later. We returned our catamaran to optimum condition and readiness in time to celebrate New Years with champagne and fireworks, the excitement for our forthcoming expeditions barely contained and our next destination Cartagena! Colombia!
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Veradero Boatyard on New Years Eve 2019 |
Our exhilarating coastal sailing in Colombia and Panama is still spine-tingling and brings a fresh excitement to memory every time we think of it. The extraordinary confluence of old and new in the enchanting city of Cartagena left us wanting so much more and vowing to return. The moment we laid eyes on the Puente Atlantico in Colon, knowing that our eminent Panama Canal crossing had finally arrived was the fulfillment of a lifetime dream. It was all so exciting and long awaited as the whole of 2019 was preparation for this moment. We reserved our canal passage for 02-20-2020, as an auspicious date, and explored the obscure but friendly San Blas Islands while waiting for our line handlers and friends Andrea, Kalev, Angela and Rick to arrive. As it turns out, they are the first and ONLY guests we’ve had stay aboard india in all this time. Following some downtime in Las Perlas after the excitement of the Panama Canal, we returned to Panama City to make the final provisions for the Pacific Passage. It was mid-March and when the WHO declared a Global Pandemic of Covid-19, we were in mid provision. Choices were grinding to a halt and ours was to ramp up preparations and head to sea. The most frightening aspect of the situation was that no one really knew the truth of the Pandemic. Facts were elusive but anxiety and concern was rampant. David and I felt that we were making the right choice in an immediate exodus and quarantine at sea and have the benefit of knowing that it was the right one now that it has clearly worked out very well for us. But our departure into the unknown with limited contact and information from the outside world was an eerie and surreal 30 plus days coinciding with an epic sea adventure. And we had no idea what we would find on the other side.
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Cartagena! |
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Our favorite restaurant! |
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San Blas with a background of Panama |
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San Blas Islanders |
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Puente Atlantico |
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Our Motley Crew |
Our first contact with another human came in the form of the young French Gendarmes we encountered on an illegal first landfall in the Tuamotos. Their friendliness and reassurance did wonders for our moral because moments of trepidation concerning the pandemic had shadowed the celebration of our ambitious undertaking and joy of arrival. From that moment onwards we felt embraced by the welcoming culture of Polynesia and awed by the sheer magnificence of beauty these multifaceted islands and atolls possess. Enticed by the fragrance and fantastical notions of Tahiti we set forth to explore as countless seafarers before us have done. We have wondered to what extent our cheerful and jubilant posts and blogs have annoyed our readers during these times of discontent, but concluded that maybe some good news and pretty pictures would be welcome respite from the continuing insanity of 2020. Besides, these incredibly remote locations so dazzling in exquisite and breathtaking views practically demand to be shared and our ultimate goal in preserving our experience is for remembrance so we can enjoy them in our later years. We do hope that you have enjoyed them along with us this year.
To summarize French Polynesia is not only difficult, but impossible, and again, our memories are available for us to review at any time. So let me just reiterate how truly grateful we are to have had such an unimaginable seven months to immerse ourselves in an absolute paradise on earth. It was more than double the amount of time we initially envisioned which allowed us to traverse a greater area than we would have done originally and doing anything less seems impossible to us now. In fact, we have only seen a mere modicum of what French Polynesia has to offer and would do it all again and then some given the time. It is hard to convey the vastness of this entire area. That it takes days to travel from one archipelago to another provides some indication. There is so much to see making choices difficult knowing one cannot ever see it all, but we are content that we experienced a great variety and cross section and wouldn’t trade the uniqueness of our personal voyages. The unprecedented days that unfolded the Society Islands absent of tourism was an encounter unparalleled in modern times and truly a highlight due entirely to the pandemic. But benefits often have a cost and the downside was that our contact and therefore our connection to the inhabitants was limited. We regretfully did not interact with the Polynesians as we would have liked and as closely as we interacted with other communities in our past travels, especially India, the Sub-continent, which enhanced our knowledge and familiarity in untold proportions. It was easier to be friendly in the more remote Tuamotos and the Marquesas and the natives we encountered infused our exploration with great personality and Joie de Vivre, entwining Polynesian hospitality with French flair. It was a privilege to share in the pristine beauty of these sparsely populated outcrops. The raw and untouched terrains and translucent waters teeming with colorful and tremendous aquatic life was a perquisite opportunity. We have been honored.
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Faa'a Anchorage in Tahiti with the backdrop of Mo'orea |
Almost all of the Pacific Islands to the west of us have barricaded themselves against the pandemic by remaining closed to tourism and understandingly sealed their borders to protect a vulnerable citizenry. It is somewhat easier to contain the virus on island nations with the ability to control immigration. Since most of these nations benefit enormously from hospitality industries, it will be interesting to see what they decide for the 2021 season. French Polynesia had only a handful of active cases and no deaths when they opened their borders to international flights on July 15th and they reached 16,696 cases and 113 deaths by Dec 28th. Fiji opened its borders to cruising yachts by the end of summer. To go there would have meant we would bypass many of the places we wanted to visit with an additional downside of not having an escape for cyclone season since New Zealand and Australia, which are outside the zone, have kept their borders closed as well. By August we were decided on a detour to Hawaii for ourselves, since we had the American Option, and it has turned out to be a blessing in many ways. Foremost, the Hawaiian Islands are beautiful, friendly and full of First World convenience, and unfortunately, those yachts choosing to sail to Fiji have just been hit by a Cat 5 Cyclone.
This brings us to a couple of questions we are asked such as what are our plans now and where will we go? To answer; Our immediate plans are to be in Honululu by late January for our now annual haul-out. We have a few items to attend below the waterline and will reapply coats of bottom paint while we’re at it. India will need a good spring cleaning following that and we will be well positioned to continue our tour of the Hawaiian Islands and sail south again, eventually flipping hemispheres for re-entry to the South Pacific. Our destinations will be contingent upon what countries become available to us for travel and whether we will be able to exit the cyclone zones in New Zealand or Australia next fall. That would put us somewhat back on our original course, but only time and successful management of the Pandemic will tell. We have discussed a route through Japan and Guam but it is a circumventer in opposition to favorable winds near the equator and now that Japan has increased its case load of infections it is less likely to happen. So the simple answer is to carry on enjoying each day, as we have learned, and embrace the opportunities that present themselves as more information comes to light.
If we were to take a stab at the highlights of the year 2020, it would surely include all of the amazing sailing we have experienced on our india this year. We have covered over 10,000 Nautical Miles in two oceans and both hemispheres crossing the equator twice. We have have sailed in conditions just exciting enough to keep us on our toes, but thankfully have not encountered any life threatening storms this year. We have met some super nice cruising sailors, such as ourselves, along the way and have enjoyed pleasant excursions and many meals and cocktails together. We have parted ways and headed to the four winds but still keep in touch exchanging valuable information while following along on other’s journeys with great delight. The incredible interactions with sea life is also high on our list. From the tiniest playful reef fish to the menacing sharks, the graceful and mesmerizing Mantas and frolicking dolphins ever eager to keep us company at sea, to the colossal humpback whales; this year has been and unimaginable parade and we have been enthusiastic spectators. As for the rest…we will let the photos speak for themselves.
We wish all of our friends and family a hopeful and prosperous and most importantly, a safe, New Year!
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Devil Rays in Bora-Bra |
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Snorkeling in Taha'a |
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Maupiti |
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David with the Mantas |
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Heiva |
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Our spot at Tiputa Pass, Rangiroa |
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Beautiful Lagoons within a Lagoon at Rangiroa |
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Tetamanu at the South Pass in Fakarava |
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Sharks in Tahanea |
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Alone in Raroia |
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Hanavave in Fatu-Hiva |
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Dramatic Nuku-Hiva |
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Our biggest catch yet! |
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One of many incredible sunsets |