Monday, April 14, 2014

Ua Pou – by Gary


  


Approaching from the sea the special-ness of this place quickly became apparent.  The creation myth for the Marquesas pictures each island as a different part of the house in which the people live – Ua Pou is the massive columns supporting that house.

Entering the relative calm of the port of Hakahau, mostly the columns were lost in cloud.



Breaking out in splendid grandeur every now and again the central peak, Mt Oave, at 1,230 m is the highest in the Marquesas.


The Marquesas are sometimes pictured as being a Polynesian culture free zone dominated by the French – but it’s not true, although it nearly was.  But since 1979 a cultural association, the Motu Haka, has set to work vigorously defending the indigenous culture.


The association focuses particularly on retention of language as well as reviving chants, dances, legends, tattoos, ancient sculptures and wood carving.  



The centre piece of the association is a program of art festivals that rotates through the islands.  During each festival ancient sites are renovated – such as this huge ceremonial site (called a tohua) at Hohoi, renovated during the 2007 festival held in Ua Pou.



A new stone ti’i (known by the Polynesians in NZ as a tiki) at the Hohoi tohua.



Emblematic of cultural pride is the wearing of tattoos, some subtle, others more flamboyant....


And the Catholic Church, for so long one of the principle drivers of cultural annihilation, has joined this renaissance movement.  Here the wonderful airy church in Hakahau.



A dazzling celebration of local wood carving skills.



And here, for the tourists, a performance of traditional music making, dance and chanting.



 
We reckon the Motu Haka is doing a pretty good job!


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Sunday, April 13, 2014

Atuona, Hiva Oa – by Gary





 Finally, after 27 days sailing from Galapagos, we made landfall in the eastern most archipelago of French Polynesia, the Marquesas.  The passage had not been without trials:

  • enroute Vicki developed some worrying health issues
  • beset with very light winds and calms, we made slow, uncertain progress
  • with the sails slatting and thrashing in the oily swells we did considerable damage to both them and our and rigging, and 
  • to top it off we grew an amazing crop of goose barnacles on Mojombo’s bottom, ensuring that even when wind arrived, progress remained painfully slow.


So perhaps you can well imagine our relief and excitement to finally make our destination; the little town of Atuona on the island of Hiva Oa.  And what a brilliant place to make landfall, we just loved it – reckon it’s got to be one of the most likeable little villages on the planet.

Snuggled at the foot of a rugged, mist shrouded volcanic peak on the windward side of the island of Hiva Oa, it is green, lush and flower filled.  The stunning setting endlessly changes with the sun, the clouds and the passing rain showers.  The local Polynesians charmed us with there warmth and open friendliness.  There were even some kids for ours to play with.

The anchorage was a perfect spot to unwind and undertake repairs to Mojombo.  And out of the ocean swell Vicki’s health rapidly improved – although with Atuona’s limited health facilities we still lack a definitive diagnosis.




Our repairs included dropping the forestay to do some work on the roller furling foil – here taking it ashore.  Tolly  (yellow top)from the boat Le Mistral was generous in his assistance.



The town’s stunning natural setting, one to rival Rio!




Warm smiles were always waiting to break out among the locals




Towns and villages throughout the world love to claim a celebrity as their own.  Benalla has Ned Kellie, Bordertown Bob Hawke, Salzburg Mozart, and Atuona??  Would you believe that most famous post-impressionist painter Paul Gauguin  He lived his final years here, dying of tertiary syphilis

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Flowers riot through the lush greenness.




One of the few surviving colonial buildings – now a general store.


But it’s the locals that really charmed us!

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Friday, April 11, 2014

Passage - By Zeke


 



Dear Reader
Recently we crossed the Pacific Ocean between Galapagos and the Marquesas. This passage is over 3000 miles long and takes a long time. It took us 27 days of drifting sailing. Boy what a relief it was to get there. Below I have written about the day to day routine of life on passage, why we like passage and many other things.


What’s Above Deck Like on Passage?

Mojombo under sail


Passage is often quite boring but at the same time quite interesting. A large part of the time you are on the sea is spent on deck watching for hazards such as squalls and other boats, of which there are many.

When you’re on watch it is an interesting feeling to know that you are in the middle of an ocean with nothing and nobody anywhere near you. Also at night the stars are amazing so bright and clear with no big lights competing or smog. The boat sails on over the waves rolling from side to side on the ever present swell. Excuse the pun but it really is a swell experience.

There are of course reasons other than star gazing that make us do watch. As mentioned before ships, squalls and keeping the boat moving in the right direction help keep you awake day and night. Passage is often quite tiring as someone has to be always awake and watching. If the wind changes direction a sail change is often required. Sail changes can last anywhere between a couple of minutes to an hour and can differ in their physical demands.

Staying awake on watch at night is not often easy. I split two three hour watch’s with Nina at night meaning I come on at 10:30pm and come off at midnight and come back on at 4:30am and off at six in the morning. When you come on watch you are initially quite tired but after a hot drink you are feeling better and you try and keep busy tidying a rope, checking your course and the sails.

The sunset’s as we run before the trade winds


I like passage being out there in the middle of nowhere just sailing forever sailing onwards with the purpose of going somewhere new. There are of course down sides one of these is that you can become extremely bored and I have more to say about this in the next paragraph.

Somewhere new


What’s Below Deck Like on Passage?
When you are down below lying in your bunk there is only a limited amount of things one can do. Trying to find some diversity in the days events can be quite hard and in the end all the days blend together. Read on to find out about our day’s events.

Reading is my chief occupation during passage and occupies me from around six in the morning to nine. At nine o’clock, the computer comes out and I proceed to play two to three hours of computer games. Around noon I come on watch and at two o’clock I come below to read some more. Dinner is at five and afterwards Nina and I tidy up. In the evening Nina and I watch a movie, read or go on watch. In the morning the processes repeats itself day after day. This is a very simple roster and often changes but it gives you a rough idea of our day.


What its Like to Get There

Food fantasies


After so long at sea fresh food starts to become scarce and meals ever more simple. Food fantasies of fresh bread and other everyday food items become increasingly common. Also exercise is another one of those things you want, so when you finally get there after almost a month you just can’t wait to get ashore and walk to the shop. It is our custom that when we arrive at port after a long passage we celebrate by sharing a large bar of chocolate (this also helps us walk to the shop). When you arrive there can be sometimes a great sense of achievement you have crossed an ocean harnessing the winds as billions of people have done before.

Harnessing the wind as billions of others have done before us.



Thanks For Reading This

This blog piece you can tell is written from the personal feeling’s and I have tried to make inspiring as possible and make you realize if you already haven’t why we are sailing around the world. Admittedly sailing round the world is mostly about seeing other places and that is another amazing experience on its own. But another part of the experience is the sailing it’s what keeps us moving on around the world.

I hope you have enjoyed this blog entry about the life I live upon the seas and have not found me boastful as I tell you about the life I live.

Zeke

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Darwin's Diary: Charles Darwin in Galapagos - by Nina

Teachers Notes
Nina had been set a school writing assignment which required her to write a narrative in three separate parts, viz: an orientation, a complication and a resolution.  She was encouraged to be as descriptive as possible in her work.  The plan she developed for her work is presented below:

Orientation
Darwin sails to Galapagos, anchors in Academy Bay and starts exploring.

Complication
Darwin sees woodpeckers similar to the ones found in South America and wonders about this. He also sees variation in finches and tortoises found between islands.

Resolution
When he goes back to England and mulls it over he comes up with a theory. He tested it on pigeons and other animals and plants then writes a book about it. The theory is about the origin of species and natural selection.

Her final narrative is presented below:

Darwin's Diary: Charles Darwin in Galapagos



1835
Monday
We have just sighted some islands off the port bow and Captain Fitzroy thinks they are the Galapagos Islands as there are no other islands in the vicinity.
They are particularly hilly and there are a few particularly pointy hills, like volcano cones. We are still a fair distance away so I can't see it clearly but I can make out that there is a brown strip around the bottom and then there is a line where it suddenly goes green all the way to the top.

Tuesday
We anchored yesterday afternoon in a sheltered bay that the Captain decided to call Academy Bay. I was taken ashore and I immediately found a species of lizard that is able to swim in the water, even though being a cold blooded animal this should be impossible, especially as the water temperature here is significantly colder than it should be this close to the equator. This is probably caused buy the Peru cold current, which gets pushed out to sea from Ecuador. The bay is also full of sea lions.



Wednesday 
Today I went exploring again and I found a woodpecker that was very similar to a species I found in Ecuador, except that its’ bill was slightly different.

Thursday
Today we hiked up inland. The highland is quite wet and as a result it is almost a rainforest. The only way I could move around was to go on the trails made by giant tortoises. Tortoises are a reptile that has a high, dome like carapace made of keratin (the stuff your fingernails are made from). When it feels threatened it withdraws its head into its shell and puts its armoured legs into a position to protect its head.

Friday
Today we sailed to another island. This one is quite large and has five large volcano cones. Here I was amazed to find a species of cormorant that could not fly. It's wings were small and sparsely feathered and obviously would not be able to fly. I was also amazed to find penguins on this island. This would make them the only known penguins in the northern hemisphere. They were very similar to Marconi penguins.

All these animals I have found are similar to ones found on South America.  The book I was given by Capitan Fitzroy about the origin of species says that species continue on unchanged until they go extinct. At the time I read his books I excepted this theory but the species of woodpecker, finch and tortoise I have discovered are very similar to ones I found in South America. This indicates that some of the ancestors of the woodpeckers that I found in South America flew to Galapagos and then adapted to the environment there.

2 October 1836
Tuesday 
I am no means disappointed to tell you that we have finally reached England. I am planning on first visiting my family for a while then I will travel around England looking for people capable of preserving and identifying the specimens I found on the voyage.

1 December 1836
Wednesday
I have found the people necessary to look after the specimens I collected. I also met Charles Lyell, the author of the book on the origin of species Capitan Fitzroy gave me. He was a very interesting man but I am inclined to disagree with his theory. I am intending to write a book about my theory but it will be difficult to present this to the public. My theory goes against everything the church has taught people for hundreds of years and if I present it in the wrong way I will be discredited and no one will ever read the book let alone consider my theory. As a result I will have to spend a considerable amount of time getting the wording of it right. I will first get a number of species of every day animals and test my theory on them. If it proves successful I will write the book out in a way that normal people will be able to relate to. If I don't do it this way I am sure to be discredited.

22 November 1859
Thursday 
My book is finally on sale. 1250 copies of my book were produced but more people have subscribed than books were made, so that is a bit of a problem. The theory in question is that species evolve around different habitats and climates by natural selection. For example maybe once upon a time giraffes had short necks. Then one was born that had a longer neck and it was able to reach juicier leaves that the others couldn't, and because of it it lived a lot longer than the others and it has lots of children, all with longer necks. Now all of these giraffes had longer necks and they started to take over from the shorter neck ones. Then some of his grandchildren had even longer ones and the process keeps going on for hundreds of years until their necks are as long as they can go.

Afterword
Darwin's book proved very popular indeed and people are still reading it, for example my Mum just finished reading his Origin of Species and a number of other books by other people about him too. If Darwin new how many people had read his book he would be very proud indeed, and he should be.

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