Leaving French Polynesia for the Cook Islands
16.09.2010
The weather eventually calmed down and the forecasts seemed okay for leaving Maupihaa so we made our good byes with the family, wishing them well in the battle with the political and business interests pressuring them to leave the island. We hope they fare well.
Unexpectedly we received emails for the family on Maupihaa, all in French of course. One was informing them of a date this month (September) for a hearing in Tahiti of their claim to stay on the island where they have lived for ten years. This was alarming as we had no way of letting them know. We emailed their friends on the French yacht back in Bora Bora and put out a call on the radio nets for any yacht likely to visit Maupihaa in the near future. No avail on this but eventually we heard from the French that they had been able to contact the family, we are not sure how but this was such a relief. We shall try to find out what has happened in a couple of weeks. We saw just one other boat, Pursuit, whom we spoke with on VHF, they were off to Niue, Tonga and New Zealand like us. We managed via the short wave radio to speak to friends John and Chris on Sara 2 who were bound for one of the Northern Cook islands and were also having good weather, they were able to give us tidal information so that we knew when high tide was to assist our entry through the shallow pass at Aitutaki. We couldn't make the morning high tide which meant an evening arrival, not a good idea where reefs are concerned as good light is needed to see them. This concerned us and we also realised that we would be arriving on a Sunday which would incur ridiculous overtime rates for officials to deal with our customs and immigration procedures. On the spare of the moment and as the weather was being so sea-kindly, we decided to risk any squalls, change course and head for Rarotonga which would take a day longer but satisfy our original plans. We got the squall but it wasn't serious and weather improved as we got closer to the island. We called up Rarotonga Port Radio to adivise them of our impending arrival and got very excited to hear good old English being spoken, we've been in French speaking islands for months. We arrived in Rarotonga in good daylight at 08.30 a.m. The harbour is not in the lagoon as that is too shallow, instead the coral has been massively excavated to provide a deep, all weather harbour which can accommodate small ships as well as yachts and an inner small harbour for smaller vessels. As we entered we could see 4 other yachts moored Tahiti style out from the rough old wall.
Almost before we had finished tying up, the agricultural health man arrived with a small spray can to check we were not harbouring any bugs. Then off to customs, immigration and harbour control for the reams of paperwork reminiscent of the West Indies! Expensive, time consuming and some unnecessary but we were not to regret coming here.
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