On the way to Suwarrow, Cook Islands

Harmonie
Don and Anne Myers
Wed 21 May 2008 22:53
15:52.474S  153:54.153W
 
We are sailing nicely, on our way to Suwarrow.  We expect to arrive sometime on Sunday, and currently have about 550 miles to go.  The weather is better than expected - not much in the way of waves and higher wind than forecasted.  Although, the wind did not show up for duty until about 2am last night.  Until that time, we sailed at a snail's pace and finally gave in and motored throughout the evening.
 
We did have one night of nasty weather in Bora Bora before we left.  Bad squalls rolled through last Sunday night with winds up to 28 knots.  Not all that bad, but the worst we've seen while at anchor in quite some time.  A couple of boats had some trouble - one dragged anchor and nearly went ashore, while a mooring chain broke for a second and they nearly went ashore as well.  Both recovered quickly enough and neither sustained any damage.
 
Only about half the fleet is headed to Suwarrow.  The atoll is so small that they weren't willing to host all 36ish boats, so those of us that like the idea of visiting a deserted island are headed north to Suwarrow, while those that prefer a more lively port are heading south to another Cook Island, Rarotonga.  Rarotonga is known for cheap provisions (as opposed to French Polynesia, which wins the prize for the most expensive provisioning known to man).  The whole fleet will be together again in Tonga, which will be a few weeks from now.
 
A couple of boats dropped out of the rally in French Polynesia - Farout, a Danish boat, and Candela, the American catamaran.  Now we are down to two measly American boats, ours and one from Seattle called Maamalni.  We two are under pressure to come up with some type of witty activity or competition for the fleet to amuse themselves with for the 4th of July.  Any and all suggestions are welcome.  For St. Patrick's Day, the Irish boat ran an Irish trivia competition.  A St. Patrick's Day photo competition was also held.  Tallulah Ruby won the photo competition hands down with their now famous photo of their crew (two women, three men) dressed in nothing but paper shamrocks covering only the most important body parts.  How can we Americans compete with that??
 
More tomorrow -
Anne