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Fire Dancing

Yesterday was another day when our prior plans were superseded by other activities. Yesterday we needed to spend some time focusing on family matters. In the morning I went ashore to pick up SIM card and some minutes for my mobile phone. It’s amazing that we’re in the middle of nowhere practically and we can have a working mobile phone and our own number in minutes. I had also hoped to pick up some pies for breakfast but it turned out I was already too late. The pies are available at 7am and it looks like if we snooze we lose.

Back on the boat I was able to talk to family and sort a few things out – hopefully. CatCo/Lagoon had already come back with some assistance regarding the charger problem. I had a few more tests to do and the result is they’ll be shipping a replacement charger out to Tonga on warranty. It’s all 2-4 day hops from here to there so we should be able to pick our weather windows and mostly sail. Even if we have to motor we’re not severely impacted at the moment as the top 1/6 of our energy supply doesn’t make that much extra boat speed. And we’d save fuel too if we had to motor.

By mid afternoon all the calls and tests were done. We needed some internet time to try and find a contact in Tonga to which we could ship the charger and water maker part. We also still wanted to visit the Tamanu Beach Hotel that evening to watch the fire dancing. The best answer seemed to be to go and hire the bikes for 24 hours so we could do everything that afternoon/evening and have them to tour the island the following day.

We managed to obtain the bikes just before the place closed. It took us a while to find the Internet Lounge listed on our map. We had brought our laptop but were soon frustrated as we were not allowed to use it. They had their own PCs and insisted we use them. All my bookmarks, etc. were on my laptop so it made a few things quite tricky. In the end, after asking again if I could use my laptop there, they suggested I go to the Tamanu Beach Hotel as they had a hot spot. So off we went. It was good to see a little more of the island. One thing that is very apparent is the damage left over from a major hurricane that came through in February.

It was good to visit the hotel in daylight so we knew what to expect later. Using my own laptop was much better and soon I was banging away. I obtained a contact via a very quick response from one of the organizers of the Tonga Rendezvous we’ve signed up for. I’ve reached out to them to make sure it’s ok but the signs are good. I also managed to upload a few but by no means all of our outstanding pictures.

We all cycled back to the dock (Helen and Ben having left ahead of me) and we went back to the boat to kill some time. We noticed a boat having difficulties in the pass. It was high tide but now past 5pm so the light was poor. When we entered we needed the light to avoid the really shallow patches and no doubt this boat had run aground. I was soon off in the dinghy to assist. It turned out to be the boat Dilan which we’d first met in Huahine in the Societies. He was surprised at the grounding as he’d been through the pass a few years before in the same boat and had no issue. I pointed out there had been a hurricane year and that with 1ft less draft than he we had bumped a couple of times. Perhaps the channel had silted up a little. I helped him off the sandbar he was on by nudging him around and waited until he’d safely anchored in the channel. With fading light that was his best option until he could assess his options the following day. I let him know the island was expecting a supply ship in very soon and that he may have to move out of the channel if it arrives.

Around 6:30 we went back ashore to eat out. We went to one of the fish/chip/burger bars on the side of the road and again had our fill. Now completely dark and with no lights we cycled to the hotel. We had to wait 3/4 an hour for the dancing so we walked the beach, chatted and had a couple of beers to fill the time. The dancing ended up being very similar to that in French Polynesia. It was longer than the show in the Intercontinental that Ben saw so that was good.

Cycling back we were assisted by someone on a moped who chose to ride along just behind us providing some excellent visibility and protection from traffic in the dark. Whoever it was peeled off at the fish and chip shack we ate at earlier without a word. I waved and thanked them for their consideration. We chained the bikes up at the nearby petrol station and went back to the boat feeling very, very tired from the days activities.

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