22.17S 166.26E Noumea

Mojo 2
Andrew Partington
Tue 11 Oct 2011 06:19
It is 6am and we are just 8 nautical miles from our waypoint and the pass that leads behind the fringing reef into Noumea. It is just starting to get light and we are headed into what looks to be fog ahead....great!!  To our port side is another yacht travelling at 6 knots which is transmitting an AIS signal. It appears to be headed for the same pass so I plan to just follow it in. Like so many other mornings on this crossing we do not have a breath of wind to push us along, the ocean is like glass. This will actually help us this morning though as the pass we are entering is known to be very rough if an easterly is blowing. I would prefer to be able to see more but you can't have everything. The outline of the Island has just come into view so I will take a break and come back later.
....At 8pm we are around 4NM from entering the fringing reef. The yacht with AIS is the "Beach House" and I am sure I have seen this yacht in French Polynesia. If I have the right boat it is a huge 100ft yacht with all the trimmings. It is going a little too fast for me to keep up or to be able to see it. As its little green triangle is moving across the chartplotter I am giving it a tap on the head every now and then and leaving a waypoint mark. I plan to just follow the marks in like a breadcrumb trail. So far so good. Thankfully we do not have a fog, it is just some haze and looks to be clearing to become a beautiful day. Still like a mirror out here. New Caledonia looks beautiful. It is a high mountainous island and is looking a treat this morning. Wish Jane and the girls were here. Rob is asleep after another long night. Not sure why but the last night before entering port always seems a little harder to get through. We will sleep well tonight, especially after a few cold beers at one of the local haunts.
Had a good sail in last night with a 10 knot easterly but it died at 5am so we were forced to crank up the motors again. It was like a freeway coming into here with several ships passing us including the "Pacific Jewel", a very large cruise ship that overtook as at 4am, at fairly close range, doing 16 knots. Back later!
....9.30am and the entrance to the reef was further south-west than I thought it might be so we have yet to enter it. The plan to use the breadcrumb trail has worked beautifully so far. I have the range marker in sight as well as the first channel marker. Thankyou "Beach House". If there is one thing the French do very well it is navigation aids. The range markers which guide vessels into port run up the full length of the mountain and cannot be missed.
Obviously someone got it wrong though as we passed what looked to be a large [80ft??] boat stranded on the reef next to an island we passed just to port. Must have been a horrible day for that skipper. The boat is completely out of the water so it is unlikely anyone will hit that particular reef again.
Very close to the island now and it still looks beautiful. There is some sort of pine tree growing close to the water and mixed in with the coconut palms. Too thin to be Norfolk pines but about as tall. Have to go again a large ferry is headed our way at speed!!
....It is now 5pm Tuesday after entering the Marina at 3.30pm. Typical of every time you enter a new country we have been running around trying to clear customs and immigration and provision the boat.
Gerard beat us here by a couple of hours and came down to the Port Mosselle Marina where we are staying late yesterday. We had a great meal and about a dozen beers last night at the Marina's bar and restaurant, which is just 15 metres from the boat. Good position to be for the wi-fi but terrible for the liver!!  Slept like a baby last night and woke to another beautiful morning. Rob took off on the bus to the airport at 8.30am and was a bit reluctant about leaving. I think the lifestyle has grown on him and he didn't really have a chance to check out Noumea which is a very attractive city. 
Gerard is looking forward to going but I suspect he is a little nervous. I'm sure once we are out there he will soon become accustomed to the routine and forget about just how far we are from land.
We have now cleared out with customs and immigration, a 3 hour exercise, and will leave around 11am tomorrow [Wednesday] for Australia. There is some chance we may make Bundaberg our entry port but have not decided for sure.
Back to daily blogs from tomorrow. I cant believe after all this time we are just a 6 day sail from Australia. I'm looking forward to getting home.
Andrew.