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Suwarrow, Anchorage Island beach |
This isolated atoll lies approximately halfway between Bora
Bora and American Samoa. The night before we arrived we came across some
fishing vessels called Ping Tai Ron. They were directly on our course, were
well lit and had AIS, so we knew they were 4 miles away and barely moving.
Jeremy called them on VHF to find out which way we should steer to avoid them
and also to let them know that our downwind sail rig meant we had little room
to manoeuvre. We received no reply. We sent several more messages by voice call
and direct by DSC. Total silence from Ping Tai Ron.
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Admiring the sunset |
We tried steering to port and the ship turned the same way,
so we steered to starboard and it moved to starboard; we went to port. As we
neared the fishing vessels, we only saw one big ship, even though there were
AIS signals for four vessels. It took us two hours to pass and was quite scary
in the dark. Jeremy hand steered and I watched the radar and the AIS down in
the saloon. If we went 6 knots, so did the ship; if we went 3 knots, so did the
ship. As we tried to return to our course, the ship closed on us. It came as
close as one third of a mile and it was big. When we arrived in Suwarrow, we
reported the incident to the Park Rangers.
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1952 -77 Tom Neall lived alone on this island |
The voyage from Bora Bora took 6 days. Apart from occasional
SE winds on the first day, there were no SE Trade Winds. We had winds from the
E, ENE and NE of varying speeds with squalls from time to time, which could
change the course by 45 degrees and give wind speeds up to 21knots. At other
times we barely made 3.5knots. We had read about the pass into Suwarrow, but
all went well. Our waypoints were accurate. We called the Park Ranger Station
when we were a mile off to check on the conditions. The anchorage is behind the
sensibly named Anchorage Island and there was one US yacht called Ocean Star
lying at anchor with Steve and Alice on board. We chose a spot amongst the bomies
and dropped the anchor. Suwarrow is now
an official port of entry into the Cook Islands and cruisers are supposed to
give 48 hours’ notice of their arrival. Harry and John, the Park Rangers, came
aboard after lunch and we were cleared for Customs, Immigration and
Biosecurity. The cost was 50USD.
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The "Pass" side of the island |
As we admired the colours of the 11 mile long lagoon behind
us, and watched the many palm trees swaying in the breeze ahead of us, our
son-in-law, Ben, was celebrating a milestone birthday back in the UK. Happy **th. Birthday, Ben;-)
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Many interested black tipped reef sharks |
We stayed in Suwarrow for 4 days, enjoying coconut husking
demonstrations by John and collecting our own green coconuts from the trees on
Anchorage Island. It’s amazing what Jeremy can do with a machete, a length of
rope and a walking pole (actually a mark one boathook works better)! We took a
dinghy trip to a reef said to be a manta ray cleaning station. The snorkelling
was good, but there were no mantas, just one or two black tipped reef sharks
which seemed a bit too interested in us. We had to row back to SD as the
outboard refused to start. Later investigations by Jeremy revealed a tiny piece
of plastic in the fuel intake pipe. At the same time he converted our 2.5hp
outboard into a 3.3hp, as advised in Practical Boat Owner. We walked round the
entire island twice at low tide on separate mornings.
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Strange underwater phenomenom |
We cleared out on Monday 10th June. Harry
prepared our clearance document and we gave him the six(!) forms he needed for
his records. On the way back to SD, we said good-bye to Ocean Star and Jeremy
helped Steve release the last of his in-mast roller reefing sail that he and
Alice had struggled with the day before. A Danish catamaran, appropriately
called Double Joy, arrived so we went across in the dinghy to say hello and
goodbye to Kel and Ula.
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Coconut crab |
We left for American Samoa the next day.
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Inspecting the "Pier" |
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Tropical idyll |
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