Saturday, 30 March 2013

Images of the Marshalls


Happy Easter to all...things are ticking along nicely. Here are some piccies of life in the Marshalls...good and not so good!!
Great tow-bar!!
Nice boat



Yea I'll take a TV
and perhaps a couple of those as well!

Presidents Cup Day

Nice tomatoes

The Australian Sausage sizzle stall!

Big boat, nice helicopter, dirty fuel

Lomwe on the helm

Alfonso the crew

fishermen going home

lets just cut a hole in the wall!

serious cruising boat

Nice foundations


Ants at Eniko

Nice house good foundations
but typical concrete cancer

Break Free nicely reefed

At Eniko

Ready to make coconut hooch

Good working canoe at Jaluit


Sunday, 17 February 2013

Tooth Hurty in Majuro 430 in Hawaii



Life in Majuro
We're finding life on the lagoon in Majuro is quite a thriving social scene with a constant stream of activities to attend. What with the regular yacht club events, a monthly yacht race, the Tuesday night dinner, nights out at the Australian Navy Base like the Australia Day celebrations and various other invitations to expat events. Then theres the Billfish club which Ants is quite active in and my WAM work and AVI (Australian Volunteers International) related events. Ants is still working away at the Wellness Centre garden and just ignoring the “in-house” politics.

We have found its becoming unusual to eat in. One problem I have found is all this socializing puts on the weight!!! Ants (lucky him) does not seem to have that problem but all I have to do is look at a coconut and Hey Presto...mid riff bulge. I think one plausible excuse for me is the higher air temperature relative to body temperature here means a person is less likely to burn off calories in keeping warm. Not a bad excuse me thinks?

Ukelele Rod at the Party
Rent A Crowd at Ants's party
The big Six O
Our latest celebration was Ants 60th birthday celebration which we held on our landlords (Ben Chutaro owns the mooring we use) lagoonside lawn under a couple of coconut palms. A truly beautiful, idyllic location. Ants had made up decent quantities of a couple of versions of his renown homebrew which went down a storm. About 30/40 yachties & landlubbers turn up to a “plate to share” evening. Rod, a California Yachtie friend, brought along his Ukelele and regaled us with his versions of some old favorites. He did a great rendition of Jim Hendrix's “All along the Watchtower” Uke style! The food spread was amazing and delicious. Ants had politely requested, as the birthday boy, for fish and vegetable dishes so Mahi Mahi and Wahoo turned up marinated in lemongrass and sesame dressing yum. The party was a great success and we have made a lovely bunch of friends here. Kimberley had commented “wow already you have that many friends to invite” and Josh's comment was “Wow 60, that's really old!”.

Tooth Hurty in Majuro so 430 in Haiwaii.
Before coming to the Marshalls it was required by AVI that both myself and Ants had to have the “once over” dental wise but unfortunately, just before Christmas, I started to get a pain in one of my back teeth. By January it had developed into an abcess and the only option offered here in Majuro was to pull the offending tooth out. Well, I'm at that stage with my teeth that I need them all. As it was a dental emergency, the AVI insurance offered to fly me to Haiwaii (easiest and nearest) for root canal treatment. Both of us decided we might as well go to Waikiki together and have a mini break while I was getting the work done ....Ants bought a ticket for himself and so Aloha and all that.... here we come.
Another bloody tourist at Waikiki
Waikiki from Diamond Head
Australian 4WDs look tame compared with above
and then a Bus bike rack in the land of the big car
Our impressions of Honolulu and the island of Oahu are mixed. It sort of reminded both of us of an immaculate Gold Coast. Lots of overweight people evident and also high numbers of homeless living beside the streets in little canvas and cardboard humpies...quite often they had bicycles which I haven't come across before. We did what we considered was obligatory and visited Pearl Harbour. Unfortunately the day we were there it was too blowy for the ferry to the USS Arizona memorial. Ants thought that the real reason the navy cancelled was the Superbowl final was on, as there was very little wind apparent in the bay. We were however happy with a visit to the USS Missouri, a huge battleship that was operational from 1925 up until the nineties and a WWII submarine, both were impressive.
USS Missouri 14 inch guns

Ants loading a Torpedo




PAPER plates and a good view at the Eco? Paradise Bay Resort 
In between dental appointments we spent two nights on the Windward coast. We bussed around the Island for a very reasonable $2.50 with a quick visit to Hailiewa and the famous Pipeline surf beach. Paradise Bay Resort on the Windward coast was a bit of a misnomer as it was in reality a mangrove creek. But to give them credit they provided complimentary Kayaks to use in the bay and we enjoyed paddling out to a sandbar turtle spotting and afterwards utilised the hotel spa and pool. There was a Mai Tai evening buffet which we enjoyed....A Mai Tai being an Haiwain cocktail that is a mixture of rum, coconut, pineapple and most probablly more very strong rum!! There maybe other spirits in there but I found it too strong to drink let alone taste, it reminded me of of the Irish hooch poteen. Ants appreciated them much more than I did!
We managed to climb a few hills while we were there after being starved of altitude in RMI (the highest hill in the Marshalls is 30ft, Mt Majuro- the rubbish dump- is a bit higher!). The classic Diamond Head was nice but crowded but the Olomana ridge views were probably more spectacular. The volcanic ridge walk was a good but serious climb with lots of exposure and scrambling. Some bits had fixed ropes which helped, it certainly got the heart rate up.
...and seriously steep
Olamana Ridge, it was quite narrow...
Kayaking from the resort
All in all very enjoyable even if I had to go through the dental work...

In our absence the Annual General Meeting of the Mieco Beach yacht Club was held and Ants was elected Race Director which I think he will enjoy doing. All that number crunching and statistics is his forte. He has already organised a reverse handicap for the next race which should be quite interesting. If it goes to plan a whole range of cruising boats should cross the finish line together.

'til next time.J&A

For those interested the link to our yacht club web page is

www.sailingmarshallislands.com

which includes quite a few photos of Break Free, the results of Race 3 and mentions our involvement with the club.
Break Free nearly catching Seal after starting twenty minutes behind










Saturday, 5 January 2013

Northern Atolls Christmas

Anchorage at Tabal Island, Aur Atoll
The Plan
We made a decision early on to take all available opportunities to explore, aboard "Break Free", our new tropical locality to the full. The Christmas break was our first decent chance for visiting the Outer Atolls. We had from December 21st until the 5th of January. Ants after a suggestion from "De la Mer" had been pondering over the charts and planned a visit to Aur Atoll 60 nautical miles to the north of Majuro and then, if time, onto Maloelap Atoll to the North of Aur.

De la Mer
The Company
The WAM program associate director and husband, Kiwis Kathy and Kevin kept us company and sailed with us aboard their 42ft Steel ketch "De la Mer".
First Stop
We left Majuro on the 23rd, at around six in the evening, for an overnighter. Unluckily it was blowing from the direction we wanted to go so unlike most gentlemen we had a bit of a bouncy upwind sail. We arrived in the mid morning of the 24th (nicely timed for bommie spotting) at the south entrance to Aur Atoll and spent the day sailing across the lagoon to the island of Tabal in the North West corner, where we had been told most of the population (about 300) of Aur had decamped for the Christmas festivities.

Tabal Beach
After rowing ashore we were taken to meet the Mayor in his little grass hut. He was asleep on a pandanus grass mat platform in the open plan hut with his wife in the small outer “kitchen bit” of the hut. We showed him our visitors permit, paid our $25 and were told we were welcome. The local Iroj (the chief of Tabal island) told us the "beat" celebrations would be in the church Christmas day morning and again we were welcome. Back in Majuro, around the churches, over the few weeks leading up to Christmas we had seen (and heard!) lots of people practising dancing and singing. This "beat" is done in rows sort of like line dancing with a leader with a whistle at the front. Each Church "chapter" puts on a performance on Christmas day and a collection is taken for each group. It actually seems to be fairly competitive with each group having distinctive dress or uniforms and trying to out dance the previous mob.

A Marshallese Christmas day
First thing "De la Mer" joined us for prsent swapping followed by fresh fruit and pancakes.
We attended the local Tabal "beat". Quite a different Christmas experience....a mixture of modern US, traditional Marshallese with a almost tribal feel. Every section of the local community was represented from young to old. We were invited to the community feast...and seated at the big table with all the local dignitaries!!! the food was served on amazing woven pandanus plates and was very traditional Marshallese fare....Pork, beef, preserved breadfruit, coconut milk, pandanus meat, tapioca starch and green drinking coconuts....I can't say yum but there was enough to feed an army for a week! We only stayed from 11am until 7pm so missed a few hours of the celebrations!
Aur boys sitting on bags of copra (coconut meat)

Making the plates for dinner

Looks easy....not




Christmas lunch at the mayoral table


The lovely older generation at Tabal

The "beat" around the Walls of Jericho (that is what they said)

The orange "beat" team from Aur Aur village, Aur Atoll

The yellow team of Tabal village

Next stop
After a fond farewell from Tabal we sailed to Bigen...a beautiful anchorage and deserted island. The underwater visibility was at least fifty metres.

Maloelap Atoll
From Bigen we sailed north to Maloelap. On the way we caught Tuna, Wahoo and in the lagoon we nabbed a Rainbow Runner (our first). 

Wahoo! and a bunch of bananas
We anchored at Taroa a village full of Japanese World War II relics....this is where the five islands of Maloelap had all decamped for Christmas. 
De la Mer going ashore at Taroa, Maloelap Atoll
We had an amazing snorkel over a Japanese munitions shipwreck in the anchorage. About 100 metres long in 15 metres of water and almost intact except for a bombed bow.

Repelling invaders!

Break Free through a rusty wreck

A typically shy Marshallese boy at the new school in Taroa


In ground cooking (in a truck brake drum)
Ashore were the remains of fuel tanks, admin buildings, plane wrecks, air raid sheltersand numerous craters from bombs dropped on the WW2 airfield and even a 6 inch cannon on the beach!
1940's Air Raid shelter/ 2012 house

Japanese fighter plane

The boys with their toys!

Old Japanese Admin building
On island the Christmas sports festival of baseball and volleyball was in full swing. The 5 groups of Maleolap were on the closed airstrip involved in a serious competition. It was closed because the lawn mower could not keep up with the grass despite a valiant attempt.
 A great visit for us.
Mowing the runway so the planes can land!

Aerodrome  baseball



Airik Island
Our next stop at Airik was strange because except for cats, dogs, pigs and 2 women the population was at Taroa. As we walked around a boat load of Airikians returned from Christmas celebrations and it all came to life again.
Residents of Airik

18 more young residents with MUM
Back to Tabal
A great downwind sail saw the fish larder replenished with 6 fish landed between the 2 yachts.
A live turtle going from Taroa to Majuro by boat! Sad? or just a difference of cultures?

A bunch of so called "300" variety bananas we were given

Making donuts for a feast
Tabal's New Years Eve was a bit unusual....we're still not sure if they celebrate the New Year arriving or not...Ants & Kevin ventured ashore but other than after midnight local Policemen, and other small groups
singing songs at peoples front doors for presents (like thanksgiving) not much was happening. The outer Atolls are dry....a no alcohol policy so maybe that has something to do with it??
Flat out enjoying island life

A couple of "cheeky" boys from Tabal in their new wellies!!!
The homeward leg
We called into the southern village of Aur Aur but with the wind and sea conditions ended up anchoring off a nearby island with the anchor at 11m and the boat in 20m...not ideal. Winds a brisk 25 plus. The sail home was a brisk broad reach downwind. The open seas had worked up a bit of a roll with a 3 metre swell. At one stage we had three or four large waves stand up abeam of the cockpit and dump a large dose of the Pacific on us and the back of the boat....its humorous after the event!!! It took eleven hours to do the 80 nms. To the skippers delight the fish count went up by two Mahi Mahi, one a huge 139cm!

All in all a great trip.