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A Wild Night in Suva

We had our morning trip to town. I did pick up some clothes, though less than I had intended. We did pick up some local craft for gifts though not yet enough. At least that’s progress. We ate a rather mediocre lunch in one of the many food courts in town before picking up some frozen food and returning to the boat. In the afternoon Helen went into her final round of cleaning in parallel with baking some cakes and muffins. I did my part by staying well out of the way. In the evening we watched a movie.

I nice surprise after the movie was getting into email contact with David and Marianne from Kilkea II. There boat is in Denarau near the airport and they were planning on taking the bus back today. The upshot is that we’ll now be taking them and having the pleasure of their company for the ride.

That could have been it for the day but it wasn’t. We were woken in the night by the boat shifting 30-40 knots of SSW wind which had blown up from nowhere it seemed. We’d dragged about 150ft before the anchor had reset. Fortunately we had room but we were now closer to another boat than we cared. The sudden wind had the bay to work over and soon a bit of a chop had picked up making the situation a little worse. In cold, driving rain we let out about 30ft more chain which, when anchored in 10ft of water, is quite a lot.

Worse was yet to come. One of the other boats hailed Suva Port Control reporting one of the commercial vessels in the harbour had gone adrift and was bearing down on the anchorage. Looking about we could see the vessel sliding sideways relative to us. Port Control advised the calling vessel to move out of the way. He was in the middle of engine repairs and was immobile. The upshot was that the huge commercial vessel came under control within 2 feet of the calling yacht. Their crew had their life jackets on and were prepared to jump should the worse come to the worse. Quite a scary moment.

This morning we’ll be moving Dignity onto the slip that’s been prepared for us. After last night I’ll be glad we’ll be leaving Dignity safely tied to the slip rather than out here.

Provisioning Day 2

Friday morning saw us heading back to town. This time the aim was to pick up things that needed to be taken back to the boat moderately quickly, ie. meats and dairy products. This we did and managed to pick up some cava from the extensive cava market on the floor above the fruit and veg market. While out and about I took a few pics of Suva.

In the afternoon I dropped off three of our dive tanks for fills and to have one inspected. They will be ready for collection next Monday before we depart the following morning. I also fixed a light in the guest cabin as the switch had frozen.

In the evening we took Peter from Troutbridge out for a curry downtown at one of the nicer restaurants to make a change from the local cheap but nice cafes he’s been frequenting.

What’s been interesting is we’re starting to bump into 2011 puddle jumpers who are now beginning to arrive in Fiji. These are the advance end of the pack heading for Australia. We feel like old campaigners meeting up with them and sharing experiences.

We have another trip planned into town today. This one is more personal: clothes, souvenirs and gifts. I find this the hardest but hopefully we’ll get through the ordeal.

Busy Day

In the morning I went ashore leaving Helen aboard the boat to reverse some more entropy. My first stop was to check out the fuel dock. It was quite tucked away and shallow and I wanted to be sure we could make it in. After a discussion with the attendant we decided it would be best to come in the afternoon, a couple of hours before high tide, and to reverse in, but not all the way.

I next headed off to the Budget Car Rental place. On the way I spotted Peter from Troutbridge sitting in a cafe. Things are gradually turning around for him and he’s surprisingly upbeat about his misfortune arriving in Fiji. The really good news is that his children’s story book has been accepted for publication which should bring him some income to help him get back up onto his feet.

The car hire company didn’t have a lot of options. The best vehicle for our needs had been verbally booked. They have a 50/50 success rate with verbal bookings and they’ll know whether or not it is actually taken this afternoon.

Most of the morning had gone by the time I returned to the boat. I managed to upload the photos from Gau (active blog readers will need to go back a few entries to see them). We decided to get in our MacDonalds fix for the season so we walked back into town, casing out the remaining supermarkets that we’d failed to reconnoiter the prior day. I was disappointed they had no quarterpounders but two double cheeseburgers and fries went down very well as did Helen’s Big Mac.

Helen had selected the New World supermarket to visit so that we did pickup up our first round of provisions which we boxed and put into a taxi to return to the yacht club. At the club, before returning to the dinghy I asked about a berth for the weekend. It turns out they can shuffle some boats around and make us a space. I also talked to the fuel dock attendant to have the dock cleared of small boats so we could turn up in an hour.

After getting our provisions back to the boat we brought the boat into the fuel dock, spun it around and reversed in. All fueled up we headed back out to the anchorage where I changed the generator oil before quaffing a couple of well earned beers.

We met up with the Jaranas for our evening meal which we ate, quite deliciously, at a local cheapo Chinese cafe, the same one I bumped into Peter earlier in the morning.

Suva

The alarm went off at 5:45am, 45 minutes before sunrise. It was dark, overcast and spotting with rain. The recent ‘cold’ snap had not moved on. We’d both had a patchy nights sleep but keen to reach Suva before sunset or, better still, 4pm when the customs office closed, we got up and got ready. It didn’t take long before we were lifting the anchor in predawn twilight.

We followed our tracks out of the bay we were in and headed for the pass. We raised the main in the lee of the land. Even so the wind was already in the teens. We jibed through the pass just as the GPS beeped dawn unfurling the headsail as we turned for Suva.

Soon we were flying along at around 9 knots in the calm waters in the lee of the outlying reef. The main was already reefed from the night before and running down wind in just over 20 knots of apparent wind we were close to having to reef the headsail too. Before long we were into the unprotected ocean in 3m swells. Unfortunately, the swell was approaching from the SSW and not from the SE which would have been much more comfortable. This felt like passage making as normally we avoid the big seas when doing inter-island hops like this. In these big seas our speed dropped a little but not by much. We were still averaging over 8 knots. It was bumpy but wild.

We reached the main island of Vitu Levu far earlier than planned. I was able to grab a vodafone signal and download the weather forecasts that I couldn’t get earlier via the SSB (too early for propagation). The marine forecast was now calling for ‘very rough seas’. We had ’em. The rough seas caused us to debate my earlier plot of an early entrance behind the reef. We decided against going into the pass just west of the Nukulau Islet, 7nm east of the main port entrance. The promise of calm seas behind the reef were overridden by the unknown complications of a possible following sea into the tight turn at the pass followed by sailing in strong winds in a constrained channel. We stayed out for another hour sailing at the angle the boat felt comfortable.

As we frequently do we jibed a little early requiring us to go wing on wing to find the right angle to sail into Suva on a reach. For the short period of time necessary we managed to put in the concentration to make this work in those rough seas. As the gap between the reefs narrowed the waters calmed and we shot into Suva harbour sailing to within half a mile of our intended anchorage before dropping the sails. By 1pm we were on the hook. 55nm in under 7 hours, including all the sail raises / drops & anchoring. Our fastest ever passage.

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Now this may sound like we were beaten up badly. In fact, apart from Helen feeling a bit off colour early on, this was a fantastic ride. The swell did gradually clock round to be more in line with the wind. There may have been a time when seas like this would have scared the pants of us. But this one was totally manageable. We always had an easy entrance into Suva as an option so there really was nothing worrying about the passage.

Within an hour of arrival we were ashore to do our formalities and explore Suva. We first visited the Royal Suva Yacht Club office to declare our arrival before walking to the customs office at the wharf south of us. Once we’d cleared in we spent 2-3 hours wandering around town. There were a large number of supermarkets which, to Helen’s delight we visited most and to my delight we didn’t visit all.

We eventually ended up looking for somewhere to eat. I fancied somewhere a little more western. Avoid the temptation of MacDonald’s we ended up at the Bad Dog Cafe enjoying a decent meal and drinks for not a lot of $$$$.

After dinner we trekked back to the nearest, and one of the best, supermarkets and picked up a few essentials before picking up a suspensionless taxi back to the yacht club. There we bumped into Bill and Cathy from Jarana and stayed for a while sharing pitchers of beer and catching up. They’re stuck here waiting for a weather window to get down to the Astrolabe reef. This is our planned first stop when our friends arrive next week. We’ll need a plan B for this sort of weather as we’ll have limited time and won’t want to hang around here for too long.

That being said we’re now down to weather watching hoping for a near term improvement over the gray days we’ve been recently having and in the medium term some favourable weather for getting south. The skies this morning are certainly brighter and the 5 day forecast shows a period of low wind days early next week. Motoring all the way south is definitely an option we’d go for.

Grey Day

It’s been miserable and overcast all day. We did see some hints of blue sky at one point but they failed to materialize. The winds, coming from the south, have made this the coolest day we’ve had here in Fiji. The bay we were in was becoming more and more rolly so we moved around the corner to a bay where there was no village and hence no need for another sevusevu.

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We’ve done a wash but had to hang it up inside to dry as it’s been raining a fair bit. We’ve had no inclination to leave the boat. To the extent we can we’ve prepped the boat for our sail to Suva tomorrow. Fingers crossed, the front that has been sitting over us the last few days will have moved on by the morning. I’m blogging early so we can get moving as soon as we wake.