2 May 2011 Takaroa, Tuamotus

The EJ's Voyage
Mike Everton-Jones
Mon 2 May 2011 19:22
What a fantastic day we had yesterday! As agreed, we went ashore at 11am for our lunch rendez-vous at the pearl farm. It was a real feast. So much food! They cooked fish 4 different ways to show us how Polynesian eat fish. There was a parrot fish boiled in salt water and served with coconut milk, another BBq in Black Soy sauce and oyster sauce, two raw fish dishes, one was the flesh of the pearl oyster marinated in coconut milk and the other some reef fish also marinated in coconut milk. They also had prepared rice, a root found in the Austral islands and boiled, BBQ chicken and a salad. There was so much we couldn't taste everything! Then they took us in their car and showed us the island. Being an atoll, there isn't much land of course, sand and loads of coconut trees. One of the main activity of the island is the copra, they dry the coconuts and when the inside is dried to specific point, it is sent to a mill that then process it into oil to make monoi. We went to see a boat wreck, giant carcass thrown on the beach many years ago during a storm. They gave us a coconut with the leaf growing so we now have a coconut tree on our aft deck. Not too sure how we are going to deal with this! They also gave us eggs, coconut milk, a big bag of different reef fishes and even came back later to see us onboard with a big box containing all sorts of food: pasta, chicken noodles, oyster sauce, black soy sauce, ketchup, vegetable oil, pates de foie, crackers, salt! I think they believe we have nothing to eat because we are not as "round" as they are! They are so generous. We are very lucky to have met them.
 
We have decided to stay here for another day. We have a few chores to do. Repairing the main sail bag which has suffered a bit during the 3000nm crossing and has a big hole, the yankee furler which has been mysteriously furled to far with both yankee sheets secured around their respective winches almost pulling the furler to breaking point. We heard the big bang in the middle of the night. However, nobody wants to own to the accident... It must have blown something in the electric box and Mike is trying to locate the problem. The watermaker is still giving us grief but we have managed to make water for just under 2 hours last night and again for about 1 hour this morning so we now have some water in our tanks. Not out of the woods yet though!
 
We will move on to Rangiroa tomorrow. 160nm from here.
 
Blue sky, turquoise water, good snorkelling nearby. Not a bad spot!
 
Love
Mike and Catherine