We set off with blue skies and flat seas apart from large 4m swells rolling up from the SW. There were lots of flying fish and we sat on deck with our dinner and watched the sun setting.
On the second day we had squalls from the east, which meant rain cells and shifting wind, so we were able to fill our water tanks and do some motorsailing for brief periods. We had a spectacular display of acrobatics by a pod of dolphins, leaping about 12' into the air.
By the 5th day we were sailing well as we entered the SE trade winds. We occupied our time watching movies, singing and playing musical instruments, reading our kindles and enjoying hauling in fish. We caught mahimahi and tuna and enjoyed fillets freshly cooked. When a fish was caught there would be a cry of "Kindles below" and we would clear the cockpit of breakables and squabs and prepare to bring the fish in.
Cathy's brother Ralph with Mahimahi (Dorado or dolphin fish)
On the 9th day out our HF radio failed so we were unable to send email position reports or contact family but brother Ralph had a satellite phone with him and made regular contact with family.
We continued to have occassional squalls to 20knots and electrical storms, but they were very brief. We had some running repairs to do to the genoa (foresail) as the ring came adrift from the clew, probably due to poling out the sail and periods of flogging as the winds died, then changed direction with squalls. As the sails are 12 yrs old, stitching comes away due to exposure to the elements. Eric did a good repair job with some spectre cordage, which was ok for the rest of the tripOn the 12th day we started to see ships and Eric had an interesting conversation from a watch captain from the Phillipines who had been 9mths away from home between Australia, Singapore and was on the way to Africa. We had to be vigilant at night and were grateful for our AIS monitor.
These ships passed on Cathy's watch
On the 17th night a Booby bird landed on top of one of our solar panels and stayed the night. The next day we sighted land. The last 45nm we had calm seas and motored most of the way..We had bets as to how many boats would be anchored at the Salomon atoll. Eric won the bet, guessing 8. We made 9....
We arrived on day 18, tired but happy. It had been a pretty good crossing but we were keen to have a quiet still anchorage. The constant movement and noise at sea is not easy
Ralph raising the Chagos flag
celebration breakfast
We snorkelled over 2 submerged yacht wrecks and another from last year was on the reef/shore.
These noddy birds were unafraid of human presence and perched only a few inches from us
We went ashore to explore and walked around the island
The Boobie birds were nesting in the trees
The noddy birds were protecting nests in the sand
and hermit crabs
after such a long time in the tropical waters of Asia. We were wary of the black tip reef sharks cruising by
We put this one back after Eric hooked it!
The water was very clear and the coral untouched. Some of the best we've seen. With little human presence, restricted anchoring areas and out of the cyclone belt it is pretty protected from sustaining damage
After 3 days at Ile de Fouquet and Takamaka we moved across the lagoon to Ile Boddam
Past cruisers have set up some washing facilities near a well so we able to wash all our salty and dirty linen and string them to dry between coconut palms.We organised a gathering ashore with fellow cruisers which was fun
Cathy cooking battered fish in the wok ashore
There used to be a settlement here with an excellent infrastructure, as there was in the other islands in the Archipelago, however the people were expelled from their homes in the 60's and 70's by the British government whot traded their islands to the USA for the cost of 2 polaris submarines.
It's incredible how nature has reclaimed back the cleared areas of the island and trees and roots have entwined the buildings
The fishing was fantastic. A baited line was taken often before it had reached the bottom
Eric had a smoker made in Malaysia (pictured beside his head ) and he produced many tasty smoked fillets
After our 14 day permitted stay we set sail for Mauritius, 1300nm to the south
Cruiser notes.
Sumatra to Chagos.
We
began this passage by following the route that Passage Planner
recommended. We motored SW until we found wind at 7 degrees . Passage
Planner had recommended 8 degrees. In hind site I believe that we
would have found almost as much wind at 6 or even 5 deg . Getting way
from the Indonesian coast seemed as important to get breezes as it
was to head south. Staying north would have saved distance and made
it easier to fill the sails. The biggest curse are as always the
little rain squalls that puff up to 25 Kts and then there’s nothing
until the light trades recover.
On
the whole it was a slow but easy passage and we arrived feeling as
though we had done a much shorter passage.
Chagos.
Amazing
place. It is astounding how quickly nature takes over after humans
leave. We lived on fish. We only met the fisheries patrol folk. The
customs never visited during the two weeks we stayed there. We had a
lot of moderate Northerlies while we were there. We had anchored
clear of the reefs and the anchor held well. It would be well worth
looking up the history of Chagos before visiting.
3 comments:
I enjoyed reading your blog. Thanks for sharing your wonderful life. Im glad Colin Gray let me know about it. From Eric's Gray cousin, Kae Lewis
www.kaelewis.com
http://www.corkrecords.com/MaryConnor/Connor.htm
Dear Crew of Erica, we are the family of Sean Terry from S/Y Finnegan who you met in Chagos. Sean was lost overboard on 22 June between Chagos and Madagascar. Please could you provide us with an email address we can contact you on or could you contact us on mariaphilip1@gmail.com. Thank you.
Dear Eric,
my name is Andy and I work for the digital magazine www.ocean71.com.
This new media is composed of a young team that is independent in the choice of their subjects.
The past few weeks, we became interested in the Chagos archipelago, and decided to write an article about the largest marine reserve in the world to inform our readers.
While searching the Internet, I came upon your blog and tried to find a contact email but didn't seem to be available ?
We are currently looking to interview people that were fortunate enough to visit this special place, in order to collect their impressions. By the way your photos are splendid!
Would you be available for a little chat over the phone?
Best regards,
Andy Guinand
OCEAN71 Magazine
aguinand@ocean71.com
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