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Kadavu With Trina

On August 8 we left Fulaga, headed for Kadavu, about 220 miles west. We followed a couple other boats out the passage, waiting to see how the current and waves affected them. We were supposed to be at ‘slack high tide’ which is high tide, just turning around to start going down – the optimal situation. But you can never

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Fulaga

At 1400 on August 2, we pulled anchor and headed south for Fulaga, (pronounced ‘Fulanga’) one of the smaller and more remote islands of Fiji. At 7 knots, the 125 nm trip took us about 18 hours. We could easily have gone faster but this rate got us to the pass outside the reef at about 8am. We waited until

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Vanua Balavu Island

We had been watching the weather, looking for the right conditions to make the passage from Qamea to Vanua Balavu Island, about 70nm southeast. If we do about 7 knots, this is a 10 hour passage, too much to do in a day and still arrive when it is light. But it is an easy over night passage and the

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Bula Fiji!

In most places, when you pass someone you don’t know on the street, the most you expect is a nod and maybe a polite ‘Good Morning.’ In Fiji, you often get a loud and enthusiastic ‘Bula!’ with a big smile. It almost feels like you just got a hug from a good friend. Fiji is a very special place. We

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Goodbye Tonga

Back in Neiafu for July 4, but there were no fireworks or other celebrations, this being Tonga, not the US. Still, we had a good time at a fund raising dinner for a veterinarian who travels from New Zealand to do mostly free work for the Vava’u community. On July 5 we went whale watching. Tonga is one of the

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Tonga At Last!

We left Samoa on June 9, sailing along the northern coast of Upolu to the Apolima Straight between Upolu and Savai’i, the two main islands of Samoa. The wind died when we got into the straight but picked up again as soon as we exited the southern end. The seas also picked up and we were in 2.5 to 3

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Samoa?

Our plan had been to go from Palmerston to Niue and then to Vava’u, a group of islands in northern Tonga. While we were preparing for the trip, we were also watching the weather. It was clear that some heavy winds and waves were coming up from the south and would soon arrive in Palmerston so we needed to move.

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Palmerston – The Story Of William Marsters And His Three Wives

Palmerston is a small coral atoll about 200 nm west of Aitutaki and part of the Cook Islands. It has 37 residents and they are all descendants of William Marsters who came there in 1863 with three Polynesian wives. Initially, he was part of a company producing copra but in time he took over the local operations and was officially

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