18.43S 172.55W Approaching Tonga

Mojo 2
Andrew Partington
Sat 24 Sep 2011 03:47
Things finally settled down last night but not until around 8pm. Until then we were given a pretty rough ride through a very steep and confused sea. We were hit hard a couple of times after dark by waves hitting us on our port beam. The boat shuddered and gear in the cabin went flying everywhere. Getting dinner was going to be tough so we just re-heated some leftovers. The seas finally abated and for much of the night we saw 15 knots of wind and seas that were easing.
Today we still have wind blowing from the south-west but have enough angle to be able to fly the genneker. We are now just 61NM from Vava'u and have given away the mainsail so we do not get there too quickly overnight. We are planning to arrive at the northern side of the island just after sunrise and have a leisurely sail into Neiafu throughout the morning. To get around the island is another 19NM and you do not want to do this in the dark. The word is that the electronic charts are not accurate for Tonga and with all the volcanic activity nearby you may just bump into a newly formed island!!
Landed a very nice tuna today. Not as big as the last one but still a very nice fish and put up a huge fight. We set it free though as we already have heaps of fish and are getting a bit fussy about what we keep. Rob came very close to landing a mahi-mahi yesterday but it slipped away just at the last minute. Big, big fish and it's lucky to have escaped because there is no way it would have been set free, they are a beautiful eating fish.
Very little moon overnight and given the cloud cover it may have been tough to see anyway. It was pitch black. Sitting at the helm station you coundn't see the bows and had no chance of seeing the state of the ocean and approaching waves. The ocean feels a far less welcoming place at night without the moon. May it return soon!!
This afternoon we either had some small whales or the biggest dolphins you will ever see pass across our bows. They were the size of a killer whale but looked like and swam like dolphins. Must brush up on my marine biology next time.
Very gentle 7-8 knots pushing us towards Tonga right now at 4.30pm Mojo 2 time. Seas are back to nearly flat. Tomorrow another port and another country. Number twelve since leaving France. looking forward to it and so is Rob.
Andrew Partington.