Preparing to leave

VulcanSpirit
Richard & Alison Brunstrom
Tue 14 Aug 2012 21:23
We're just about to leave Bora Bora after three months in French Polynesia. We've checked out with the Gendarmerie (most of them are 'real' French, on 3 month secondments from metropolitan France) and got our tanks filled with duty-free fuel. I really can't understand why travellers are entitled to duty free fuel; it seems financially stupid - we'd pay any price they asked, and it's all imported on the same boat, so I can't see why allowing foreigners to have fuel at a lower price than the locals makes any economic sense).
We also had to fill up our cooking gas. This is sometimes a real trial - there is a bewildering number of different fittings around the world, and two types of gas (butane & propane) in bottles that are not entirely compatible with each other. In Bora Bora it is impossible to get our bottles with US-type gas valves filled, nor our European camping gas types. All you can get is a huge cylinder with a 'European' fitting. But luckily I had invested in a set of international connectors in the UK before we left (£130). We used them here for the first time, not without some trepidation, following instructions in a sailing book.
Here is our set-up in operation:
 
 
 
The large cylinder weighs about 30kg, 13kg of which is gas. It's strung upside-down on a convenient strong point on a friend's boat and a hose with an adaptor at either end connects the two cylinders. The large one is full of liquid butane ('cos this is France). The smaller one is an American propane cylinder (it's OK to put butane in a propane cylinder as the gas pressure is lower). Liquid gas flows slowly down the tube by gravity, over time filling the smaller cylinder. Unfortunately without a pressure gauge it is impossible to tell when the cylinder is full, and it's important not to overfill as this can cause the cylinder to burst - a good thing to avoid. So we rigged up a balance to compare the weight of a full cylinder (which we luckily had) with the one to be filled. Worked like a dream, and we filled our cylinders, those belonging to our friends on 'Twice Eleven' (from Winnie the Pooh, 'Now we are six') and those of some Norwegian friends, at a very good price.
Before crossing an ocean it's a really good idea to check the rigging - the whole thing is held up by a few split pins which can wear or rust, and then down comes the mast. So hre is Ali in the bosun's chair checking the top of the mast. It's only 23m above sea level, but feels more when I'm grinding away by hand to winch her up (we don't use the electric winch for this any more after hearing of a couple of horrific incidents with lost arms or hands).
 
 
 
You can see our French courtesy flag in the first picture, flying from the starboard spreader where it has been for the last three months. But only for a few hours longer!.