Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Still in Tahiti

More than 3 weeks since we arrived in Tahiti and we are still here. Although it is a lovely island and we have been having a great time, we never intended to stay this long. What has been holding us here is the expectation of our replacement chartplotter and tillerpilot arriving from America. It all sounded so positive when we arranged it with Tuckker, our friend and manager of a West Marine store in Florida: 3-5 days delivery to us. Seems things slow down once they hit Tahiti though. We have now engaged an agent to try to track the package down for us and if we don’t have it by the end of this week, we will press on into the Pacific without it. Paper charts and hand steering all the way!

We have moved from the town quay to a mooring field off Marina Taina, about 5nm from the centre of Papeete. Like little chickens coming home to roost, many of the friends we have made along the way are also here. Once again we are being social butterflies, meeting people we have only known previously by their voice on the radio; marvelling at couples who live aboard boats smaller than Brio. For about a week now it has been blowing 25-30kts all around the area, but not in our very calm mooring field. So, although we are ‘stuck’ here, we are also glad to be here and not trying to sail in such wind.

Apart from dealing with our postal administrivia, we have been making the most of our time here. We took a day trip around the island by car with another couple. Compared to the islands of the Marquesas and Tuomotus, Tahiti is very built up and busy. Most of the population lives on the coast, but there are a few roads that follow valleys inland. Turning in from the coast, one gazes skyward at steep, green pinnacles with their tops covered in cloud.
Papeno'o Valley

We went into town one evening to watch a performance of the Heiva competition. We saw 3 dance troupes and 2 singing groups. It was an amazing spectacle: about a hundred people dancing on stage at any one time, dressed in the most exquisite costumes, with drumming and other musical accompaniment. The singing groups are not quite as spectacular and the dancers and the locals in the audience show it by leaving their seat to go outside while the singers perform and then returning for the next dance! I found the singers a bit mesmeric actually as the song is quite repetitive and the group sways as it sings. One group dressed in bright yellow looked like a bunch of sunflowers swaying in the breeze!
Blurry, but amazing

We visited the Musee de Tahiti which has a good display of artefacts from the area. While there we found out about the traditional games they were holding there on the weekend. We went along last Sunday, easily hitching a ride there as the public transport system here is not good. Local people seem quite used to picking up hitch hikers and delivering them exactly to their destination. The traditional games were fun to watch, especially the javelin tossing. Not like we are used to seeing: these javelins are aimed at a coconut positioned on top of a pole some 9 metres high. All the competitors throw at once and they are all kitted out in colourful team outfits (bien sur!).
Above & Below: images from the traditional games

1 comment:

  1. Searching for something completely different, came across your blog. We did the passage Toronto to Brisbane in 1 year 9 months, 1997 to 1999. Your reflections on Tahiti's repair time made me laugh! We were forced to spend 9 weeks tied up downtown Papeete waiting for Yanmar to get us a new transmission. I hope your wait isn't as long!

    Safe passages,
    Christine
    Tuuli, Alberg 37

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