First glimpse of Vanuatu (and the cat on Mystery Island)

As the sun came up after three hideous night shifts from Fiji, we saw Vanuatu. Did we expect to see something broken? We knew this country, more than the others on our adventure, was going to be different because of the devastation of Cyclone Pam.

It’s the first time we’ve sailed downwind for any length of time. Very rocky rolly but I wasn’t seasick (no medication). Woop woop. Dean was in his element because he got the genaker out. No fish. But we caught ONE in Fiji. Fish count for the whole five months – ONE. A beautiful bright yellow mahi mahi. We were so scared we’d caught a poisonous one that we didn’t eat it till someone confirmed it was okay. Best fish ever. Except for Queen Charlotte Sounds blue cod of course.

The first island we saw, Aneityum, in southern Vanuatu, looked so solid it could blow any cyclone away. The first thing I thought of was that it looked like Kapiti Island – a chief lying down with his hands over his belly. No palm trees, just cliffs and ridges and lushness. I had a bit of an emotional moment – of course it could totally be self-created from my own expectations. Other’s felt it too.  

We spent five days in the main village in Analgawat Bay getting to know the villagers and the land. I think it takes at least a week for them to realise you’re not just going to leave before they invest in you. They are a lot shyer than Fijians. I like that.

The first days were taken up with ‘festivities’. First, a not-so-much-cringe cultural tour around the village, then and a show and feast on nearby Mystery Island. Parts were fascinating (seeing how they cook, umu and hangi style; and how they still fish with traditional grass nets). And some were very uncomfortable (women in traditional gear showing weaving techniques – it was a very cold night).

On the tour, Kenneth, our tour guide, had his two sons demonstrate how to use the fishing nets. They looked like typical awkward, disinterested teenagers. This village has introduced more traditional ways that have been lost since the missionaries came. They kick their sons out when they are teenagers and teach them to build and house and fish. There are these cool little huts around the island with ‘Danger, Keep Out’ signs on. They are a few metres away from their parents hut but could be in another land.

The police station on the main island was hilarious. It was a small, concrete building that had a lock-up cell the size of a closet, with a teeny padlock on. Above the door was a big sign in capitals, NO RAPE. All the posters on the walls were in English and the floor was stacked with outboard motors. A TV was playing a cartoon where characters were bashing each other.

The ‘shop’ sells two minute noodles and the only DVD’s you can buy are Rastafarian music videos. I never saw a DVD player or a TV.

I met a cat on nearby Mystery Island where the show and feast was. It lived on the island alone with no other cats or dogs or humans. It wasn’t skinny but it had a bung eye. It was obviously fed tourist scraps because when I asked where we should put the leftovers on our plate after the feast, I was given a sweeping motion. P&O Cruises come here most weeks. Mystery Island cat had the cutest, round face. It would hate being a boat cat. Maybe.

Most of the ICA boats left the next day – we were sick of rushing – so we stayed. There’s such a difference between a holiday and an adventure. Then add a whole new layer like a country recovering from a cyclone and it’s overwhelming.

However, I am now totally over my, “What’s paradise, what’s home, why aren’t I happier?” neurosis. Vanuatu, so far, has been very sobering and totally awesome.

Tomorrow a waterfall, the next day a live volcano: wholy shit. As Kim says, “There’s no ‘ho-hum’ on this adventure'”.

Sorry, no photos. Internet too dodgy here, even in the capital. Wait till you see the video of the volcano at Tanna Island.

Tomorrow we go out to the outer islands – really in wop-wop land. Can’t wait. We’re fascinated by this place. It’s very special

 

 

The things we’re surprised at (and how to finish a cup of tea)

I still squeal when I see a teeny round island with white sand around it. It’s the unreal ‘perfect’ postcard landscape look. I’ve seen it many times before in movies and Google images. So I stare really hard to make it real, in front of me, but it doesn’t happen. I can’t imagine doing this at the tiles in our local mall at home in Porirua. And I can’t image not squealing at little topical islands. Maybe it’ll be time to go home if I do.

We’re surprised at how tired we are. There’s a sailor’s fatigue: We’re either tired from lack of sleep from a rolly anchorage or the chain dragging overnight; night shifts on a longer passage; being adventurous and looking for a shortcut across the island and finding swampy stuff and biddybids that attack; or just risking our lives getting in the dinghy at night after a few wines and forgetting our head lamp. This is NOT a complaint. I just need to find a way to get excited and be tired at the same time (and not mistake tiredness for depression).

And we’re surprised at how amazing food tastes when you’re running low on things. A fresh pawpaw when you know there’s only one can of peaches left and a few over ripe bananas; a crispy lettuce salad when you’ve had nothing fresh for a week and you’ve run out of ways with carrots; how gorgeous bacon and eggs taste after a long passage when it’s been too rough to even reheat; how amazing a cup of tea tastes, with sugar (which you don’t normally have) when the sun is coming up and you know you’ve got the time and space to finish the whole cup of tea.

And I’m surprised at how I’m learning to trust the things that scare me. Glen, another cruiser, said to me a few weeks ago that you overcome fear by either knowledge or faith. I’m slowly starting to learn more (the anchor snubber goes around the rails, not inside) but mainly I’ve got to have faith in the boat and faith in Dean, and to trust that in the scary moments I will be okay. I’m not one of those superduper practically capable women who find ways to do things…I still stare at the snubber and have to say out loud, “So the green loop is for the starboard thingy, the red loop is for the port thingy – except when I panic – I don’t even see a loop when that happens.

I like being surprised. Except by this…The decision to leave for Vanuatu has been delayed until Friday. It’s Monday. We’re at Musket Cove, a VERY commercial place. We have no budget to join the others in the bars and restaurants or buy expensive, beautiful things in the gift shop that smells so good. Oh wow – five free days! It’s been crap weather and we’ve been on the boat a lot already…starting to get cabin fever…reorganised the cutlery drawer, played cards, cooked for the passage (egg foo yung and tofu/vege curry) and oh yes, I am currently addicted to Candy Crush – BAD game. Any ideas?

 

Dean pulling up our anchor at Momi Bay, just round the corner from Nadi. He's very good an anchoring. Some cruisers are not. Some cruisers take half an hour and they still put 50 metres of chain out, over our anchor, then scream at us when they go to leave the next morning and can't up anchor. They are French.

Dean pulling up our anchor at Momi Bay, just round the corner from Nadi. He’s very good at anchoring. Some cruisers are not. Some cruisers take half an hour and they still put 50 metres of chain out, over our anchor, then scream at us when they go to leave the next morning and can’t up anchor. They are French.

 

Toys at Robinson Crusoe Resort, Fiji. A very down to earth, yachty-friendly place with an incredible fire dance. Food is the normal bland. Worst bacon and eggs I've ever paid for.

Toys at Robinson Crusoe Resort, Fiji. A very down to earth, yachty-friendly place with an incredible fire dance. Food is the normal bland. Worst bacon and eggs I’ve ever paid for.

 

Don't know what I was trying to do here.

Don’t know what I was trying to do here.

 

Dean's getting sick of me taking photos of him. I'm sick of taking selfies of myself.

Dean’s getting sick of me taking photos of him. I’m sick of taking selfies of myself.

 

Fiji landscapes-4

I sat in this chair for an hour – not reading, not playing Candy Crush, not saying hello…nothing. Very odd and blissful.