16.59S 153.31W Leaving Tahiti

Mojo 2
Andrew Partington
Sat 10 Sep 2011 23:31
At last Mojo 2 is sailing west again after leaving Papeete Harbour on Thursaday afternoon.
With me is my son Robert who is back for his second stint after his time aboard in Aruba and Panama. I picked Rob up from the airport at 9pm Wednesday after being entertained and propositioned by a very leggy boy-girl at the bus stop. The bus never arrived so I grabbed a cab and just made it to the the terminal on time.
The next morning we headed into town to clear immigration and show Rob Papeete. Like everyone else I got ripped off getting my bond back out of the bank. It never ceases to amaze me just how hard countries make it for visiting yachties. They put you through dozens of hoops and often relieve you of hundreds of dollars. All of this is despite the fact that cruising yachties put thousands of dollars into local economies. The word I have is that Australia is one of the most difficult, we shall see. Beaurocrats and politicians - ha!!  [end of whinge]
We sailed out of Tahiti at about 4pm and set a course for Moorea. I wanted to show Rob where Blair and I had anchored for a couple of days but it was close to dark as we approached so we re-set our brand new autopilot [replaced on Wednesday] for Raiatea and Tahaa some 100NM away.
Had another fairly tough crossing to Tahaa with up to 28 knots of wind but nothing to compare to the 40 knots seen by Blair and I a couple of weeks back. We sailed into the protection of the fringing reef at Tahaa at around 2pm. The winds were still at 20 knots so we gave away any plans to take a quick snorkel inside the reef and just sailed straight out through one of the western passes and back out into the Pacific Ocean.
The weather was pretty bad as we set our course to Palmerston Atoll some 670NM away but as the afternoon progressed the weather became better and better. Overnight we had a great sail in 16-18 knots of wind directly behind us. The seas were confused at first with swell lines from the west and south meeting abruptly and bouncing us around. Toaday we have a cloudless sky and wind up our bum at 12 knots - perfect!
At around 8am we broke out the fishing gear and once again Dean's purple lure, that has landed us so many fish, did not let us down. Within 20 minutes we had a very big strike [sorry Blair!!]. Rob jumped to the reel as I downed sail and stopped the boat. It was clear immediately that we had hooked a very big fish. For the first few minutes we were losing far more line than we were able to gain. The fish had gone deep and kept coming up with run after run. With Rob and I working in tandem over a period of 40 minutes we were eventually able to bring the fish to the surface. Once this was done it was all over and we were able to land a massive [for once I'm not exaggerating] yellowfin tuna. The fish was too big to land on the back steps so I had to haul it right into the back of the boat. Not sure just how much it weighed but I would suggest it was heavier than me and not to far off being 6" long. I was certain the fish was not going to survive a return to the water so we cleaned it and kept as much of it as possible. To have kept all of the available fillets we would have needed another freezer. I'm not sure how good an eating fish they are and would welcome any information. As far a size goes Dean's sailfish still wins but as far as fight goes this magnificent fish wins hands down. All up catching, photos and cleaning took 2 hours.
It is now 1.30pm and Tahaa is 116NM behind us and Palmerston Atoll is 556NM ahead of us.
Andrew Partington.