Sunday, December 14, 2008

New Zealand

Monday, 15 December 2008
Latitude: 35°44.47'S Longitude: 174°20.99'E
 
The trip from Vanuatu to New Zealand was interesting, in that it was the first time we tried to make a passage inside a "weather window."  We had gotten to know Winfried Luetke, the German weather-guru for these parts and decided to listen to his advice.  That meant sailing a lot faster than we usually do.  Still, in the beginning it was slow going.  We couldn't get our engines started and then we had entangled our anchor chain so badly in the coral, that we left at lunchtime instead of at daybreak. 
 
Winfried & Ute on their Moody 40 ANNA MARIA forged ahead, first 50, then 100, 120 and finally 150 miles ahead of us.  At that point I got worried that the "weather window" would go to Kiwistan without us. 
 
But I needn't have worried.  The very next day, we finally got some decent wind (on the wind is the best for us, and 20 knots is pretty much optimal) and tried to catch up sailing 9 1/2 knots.  From then on we were moving OK, but unfortunately the weather started to deteriorate.  Winfried told us that we had better hurry, as there would be around 35 to 40 knots waiting for us, if we didn't.  Not counting the squalls and gusts, of course.  The Des of Opua Offshore Radio announced a Gale Warning.  Down here this means serious business and we began to think of seeking shelter in Opua instead of sailing on to Whangarei, as we had originally intended.  Winfried strongly recommended this.  Still, we were wary, as this meant that we would have to enter at night - something we don't do if we can at all avoid it.  What was the lesser evil?
 
That problem was solved for us, when the Kiwis upgraded the gale warning to a storm warning.  We had to deal with 35 to 45 knots as it was - boats in our immediate vicinity saw plenty of lightning (which we didn't see) but no where near as much wind - and several times the anemometer registered more than 50 knots.  Sometimes we were surfing with more than 14 knots, but as the waves still hadn't reached a dangerous height, I tried to make as many miles as possible. 
 
Then the autopilot reported a "no pilot error."  Never had that one before.  I took all sails down and rebooted all systems.  Still no go.  After an hour of playing with the electronics, the autopilot started working again.  All the time I kept a sharp lookout for our friends on the 20 meter Mac Gregor 65 HAI YUN.  I expected them to overtake us at any minute.  ANNA MARIA was in the vicinity as well and through the heavy rain I once saw a container ship, which disappeared from sight in minutes. 
 
Finally we made it to the entrance, through the Veronica channel and to the Q-dock.  The breakwater was absolutely jam-packed with boats, so that we had to park our boat on the outside.  Winfried & Ute took our lines and a short time later we were smug in the cabin of CHAMPAGNE drinking the king of wines & the wine of kings. 
 
Customs allowed us to stay at the breakwater, as the wind was simply too strong to move the boat.  ANNA MARIA had arrived an hour before us and HAI YUN had arrived about six hours after us.  The next day we spent with Winfried & Ute, then went to bed to catch up on sleep.  That was not to be. 
 
In the very last gust all of our aft-lines broke and DHARMA BUM III crashed with both bows head-on into the breakwater, thereby creating two new beautiful holes in our hulls.  One of the children from HAI YUN came aboard and quite a crowd of people helped us onshore.  It took quite a bit of heavy duty work to secure our boat once more. 
 
The next day we moved off into the very shallow water off the dock and dropped the hook in about 1 1/2 meters of water.  We met our old friend Roy Starkey, who had build his ferro-cement boat SEA LOONE in the early 70s.  Roy is 64 and currently on his 3rd circumnavigation.  We had met 20 years ago in French Guyana and again in Tonga in 1995.  I was very glad to see him again, as Roy is one of the old-style yachties that have gone pretty much the way of the dinosaur.  Another one of these is Henry Wakelam.  Henry was the best friend of French sailing legend Bernard Moitessier and also of James Wharram, the designer of the Wharram catamarans.  Henry is a mechanical genius and now lives far away from so-called civilization in the middle of nowhere. 
 
He is married to Yannick, who was the first French woman to circumnavigate, possibly all by herself.  Talking with Roy, Henry & Yannick I felt that this crazy lifestyle still has many things to offer, because where else would you meet interesting people like this? 
 
Winfried & Ute are another example.  We spent almost every day with them and talked about a very wide range of subjects.  That's one reason why we stayed in Opua for about two weeks.  Another one is the scenic beauty up there.  I could well imagine living in a place like that. 
 
Just before we were scheduled to leave, another bit of bad weather came through.  I heard it howling, but wasn't overly worried, as I had plenty of chain out for shallow water like this.  Still...
 
Aurora Ulani woke Liping with the words, "Mama!  GPS-anchor alarm!"  Sure enough.  Things went so fast, that we had slipped by the catamaran FELICITAS of our friend Edmund and then we had problems starting the engine.  The brand-new starter batteries from Majuro had completely died.  Fortunately I had a spare one.  But when the engine finally ran, I saw that we had another problem.  The depth sounder showed only 0.60 meters of water.  That's too little even for us.  AND the cooling water intake had been blocked, as there was no water coming out of the exhaust anymore.  On top of that, we were still moving slowly but steadily ashore. 
 
That's when I decided that it was time to ask for help.  First I tried via VHF-radio, then I let the dinghy down and went looking for Roy.  After I had woken him from his slumbers, I went in search of FELICITAS, but failed to locate her in the rain and darkness.  Meanwhile Liping was dealing with Whangarei Maritime Radio Zulu Lima Mike - but they seemed mostly concerned with correct spellings.  Winfried ("No fear!  It's all mud for miles and miles.  You are as safe here as in your mother's womb!") and TANOA-Michael arrived and soon Roy showed up with a huge CQR anchor, which was dropped in the mud.  That finally stopped our dragging. 
 
The next day, I had to re-anchor several times and then went diving to check the cooling water intake.  Unfortunately it was clean.  Edmund came and produced a substantial number of shells, crabs, stones and the like from our primary cooling water filter.  He blew into there mightily and finally resorted to poking into the innards of my saildrive with a coat-hanger.  Lo and behold!  The water started gurgling again & I felt like saying multiple Hail Marys, as the impellers were still OK and - more importantly - the heat exchanger had not been cemented solid with concrete.  Edmund got as much beer as he wanted and a meal from Liping for his efforts. 
 
On the trip to Whangarei we saw three small penguins and now we are anchored in front of the NORSAND boatyard where we will be hauled out on 16 December.  Our flight to Hamburg takes off on 21 December and when we are back here, we can look forward to several months of unremitting work on DHARMA BUM III.  Just so I don't get bored, I acquired a used radio-modem, so that hopefully I can send and receive eMails from the high seas in the future. 
 
And then we might carry on towards Asia or we might head for South Africa.  There are plenty of other options as well, but it would be tedious to list the lot.  We'll see where the wind blows us.  Until then, Merry Christmas & a Happy New Year!  :-)
 
 
--
Holger Jacobsen
S/V DHARMA BUM III
YACHT-IN-TRANSIT
c/o Norsand Boatyard
10 Fraser Street
Port Whangarei
Whangarei 0110
New Zealand
Phone
+64210445427 

New Zealand Pictures

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Mama & "MauMau" (as she called herself when Mike of KE AMA II asked her name)
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Monday, October 20, 2008

Catamaran DHARMA BUM III from the Marshall Islands to Vanuatu

Latitude: 17°44.20'S Longitude: 168°18.59'E

Once we got the EPIRB and new radio system installed and working, we were pretty much ready to go.  I was very keen on trying two new features, especially the daily position updating at http://pangolin.co.nz/yotreps/tracker.php?ident=KE6PIB which worked rather well.  Having HAM-radio friends send eMails through KE6PIB@googlegroups.com ( http://groups.google.com/group/KE6PIB  ) or KE6PIB@yahoogroups.com http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/KE6PIB/ ) presented some obstacles, though.  Hopefully I can reconfigure the spam-filter somehow so that others can post to that address. 
 
As there was almost no wind, the beginning of the trip was pleasant enough.  Aurora Ulani didn't get seasick, thanks to medication against motion sickness, and Liping didn't even bother to take her pills.  The calm stayed with us for quite a while.  Occasionally it was interrupted by violent squalls, so that we always had two reefs in the main at night and also had the genoa only partially unfurled.  We didn't want to ruin any more sails.  We destroyed two foresails so far, both in Micronesia.  I kept an eye on our brand-new genoa from Lee Sails in Hong Kong.  And we sure as hell didn't want another toggle to break (almost losing the mast) as had happened near Tarawa in Kiribati.  Naturally our average speed was abysmally low, but we don't really care about "performance".  Safety, reasonable comfort and above all avoiding costly damage are much higher on our list of priorities.  When a particularly nasty squall darkened the whole horizon, we even took down sail altogether. 
 
We did not use our engines at all.  Apart from the high price of diesel, the noise, the vibration and the stink, there was another reason for that.  When checking the port engine, I suddenly noticed a whole lot of engine oil in the bilge and after some consultation on the radio and various checks, I determined that the seal at the crankshaft had developed a big leak.  Not possible to fix in the middle of nowhere.  And just a couple of days later the belt broke on the other engine.  I tried to put on a new belt and found out that I had been given belts that were too small, even though I had brought the old belt with me.  I should have checked.  I managed to get it on anyway, but decided to use the engines only in absolute emergencies.  It wasn't all that different from previous trips, as we dislike motoring anyway.  We much rather wait for a while until the wind comes back. 
 
Somehow we made it as far as Butaritari, where the wind died completely.  We drifted around for such a long time, that finally one of the big purse seiners dispatched a helicopter to see if we needed any assistance.  Life was good with excellent food and every dinner in the cockpit was accompanied by one of the sixty bottles of white wine from Australia which a fishing master of a purse seiner had given us in Majuro.  Sometimes Aurora Ulani spent part of the night watch with me, while Liping was busy teaching her the names of the planets, stars and constellations.  And, of course, continuing with the second year of Calvert School.  Right now we are at Lesson 43. 
 
Then there was a male/female couple of Mahi Mahi (Coryphaena hippuris) which followed us for a couple of days, a few boobies that visited us, as well as some red tailed tropicbirds (Phaeton rubricanda) and various schools of small dolphins. 
 
On the tenth day I was working at the mast when suddenly the winch handle slipped out of the main halyard winch and crashed into my shin.  There was an amazing amount of blood and I had visions of rust stains all over the foredeck.  Liping started to cry when she saw the mess and I was busy pressing a wad of kitchen paper against the wound to try and stop the blood.  Always a bit scary when you see that much blood in the middle of nowhere. 
 
When the wind came back we sailed with six knots past Abaiang and then Betio on Tarawa atoll.  We could have waved to our friends or called them on the cellphone, but we didn't have the right SIM-card anymore.  So we just looked at the local fishermen in their tiny boats.  Those guys often get lost at sea for real.  However, they have all kinds of different fishing gear on board and their survival skills are absolutely amazing.  Many of them get picked up alive and well after drifting for quite a few months. 
 
After two weeks we crossed the equator.  We could observe small pink Portuguese man-of-war (Physalia physalia) tacking against the wind as well as a turtle, which didn't quite trust our friendly intentions and took off in a hurry. 
 
The wind went down to 0.0 knots and I could have used the surface of the ocean as a shaving mirror.  Our HAM-radio friends offered moral support because of the lack of wind or they made jokes about our record-breaking progress.  But except for the squalls we were quite happy.  Our new black trampolines, made from a discarded purse seiner net, held up better than the original ones which offered way too much resistance to the water.  We had left the two forward water tanks empty on purpose and instead of storing the dinghy on the foredeck, we had secured it in the davits in order to keep the weight forward as low as possible.  And whenever the wind piped up, we reefed.  We didn't ruin our sails and didn't break anything else either.  The only thing I missed was a cold beer and I even considered starting brewing again there and then. 
 
After three weeks things changed rather abruptly.  Our autopilot went into standby mode more and more often, which caused all kinds of trouble.  At first I thought this happened because I hadn't trimmed the sails correctly.  But that wasn't it, as these things even happened under engine alone.  Then the wind instruments gave erroneous readings, which was quite annoying especially at night.  Finally the Garmin-GPS (which is connected directly to the autopilot) repeatedly switched itself off and was difficult to get started again.  The wind picked up quite a bit and the weather forecast spoke of "very rough seas" around Vanuatu.  There was bad weather in Tonga and Fiji, too.  Yet another perfect arrival... 
 
Since we didn't want to enter Port Vila in darkness, we took down all sail.  Once it got light, we were underway again.  Just when the wind went up above 30 knots (I remembered Irishman Connie saying that everything above 30 knots means business) our big port genoa winch decided to quit.  The self-tailer broke, the sheet got jammed, Liping started to panic and a steady stream of most horrible swearwords burst from my mouth.  A wave slammed into our side and I could hear all kinds of stuff falling and breaking inside.  All this within sight of the bay. 
 
Two other sailboats were making for safe harbor, so that I had to keep an eye out for those guys as well.  As soon as we were through the entrance, a launch with officials told us where to anchor - very close to other boats on moorings and with no chance to pay out sufficient chain - and when the quarantine man had inspected our boat, I saw that one monohull near us had totally destroyed her genoa.  We had been comparatively lucky, as our sails were still intact.  A bit of wear at the Sunbrella UV protection strip where the sail rubs against the spreaders, that was about it. 
 
I took off in a hurry to clear customs (it was Friday) and pay the high fees when I heard someone call my name.  James from Majuro, formerly crew on the superyacht KE AMA II, invited me to a cold beer.  We had been sailing for 24 days and with our average speed of only 3 knots we must have set some new record for slowness.  Catamarans are supposed to be fast, right?
 
~~~~~
 
Monday we applied for Liping's visa for New Zealand and were told that it would take three weeks.  Then we checked out the place.  Tourists everywhere, big cruise ships calling often.  A little black helicopter kept taking off and landing on a small pontoon right next to our boat.  When buying baguettes and brie at "Au Bon Marche", I was reminded of prices in Tahiti.  The open air vegetable market was affordable and excellent though, as were the numerous Chinese shops. We would have good food and our spirits rose a couple of notches.  We met friendly people and Mr. Tan drove us all over the place, so we could buy proper rain-gear and rubber boots. 
 
KE AMA II was here and we met with the crew again.  They only had a few days before taking off to New Zealand.  Now boats are leaving all the time, as the cyclone season in the South Pacific officially starts on 1 November.  They are very rare here, though.  It is much more likely to run into a late winter storm in the vicinity of New Zealand, which is why some experienced people leave as late as December. 
 
When we went to the pharmacist, he told us that he wouldn't bother with the malaria pills here in Port Vila.  Insect repellent and long sleeves should be more than enough - and we didn't see anybody in long pants here.  Since Panama I am wearing my swimming shorts everywhere and I guess I will change into long pants somewhere on the way to Whangarei. 
 
~~~~~
 
Every morning at 5:30 we are awakened by our cellphone.  I make a big bowl of hot lemon tea - nights are cool - and putter about until the girls are up and ready. 
 
The day begins very early here and at lunchtime people enjoy a lengthy siesta.  At 6:00 a.m. there's the "Rag of the Air" net on the HF radio with weather for the whole South Pacific.  At 7:00 a.m. it is followed by the German SSB net with individual weather for every participating yacht.  And at 8:15 a.m. there is the local VHF net which is mostly done by our friends on the Belgian trimaran SLOEPMOUCHE - American Chinese Jacky does the weather - and by Ivan from the "Namba Wan Cafe".  At that time we are often ashore, if Liping is not doing a Calvert Lesson with Aurora Ulani. 
 
We don't have all that much contact with the other boats, who are mostly wealthy retirees on their very first trip.  Different wavelength.  Almost all on a mooring or even in the marina.  They go shopping and eat in fancy restaurants, dress up nicely and interact mostly with each other. 
 
Our breakfast is rather French and except for the Brie, it is very inexpensive.  Pate of deer or wild boar, various cheeses, fresh cherry tomatoes and so on.  Yum!  Yum!  Lunch is often the same or sometimes a small Chinese dish.  Dinner often an elaborate Chinese dinner accompanied by white wine and recently quite a bit of steak.  Vanuatu is a land of cows and beef is very inexpensive here.  Suits us just fine. 
 
In the afternoon I often work on the boat.  Recently I constructed a rain-catcher, this time out of the smallest tarp I could find.  Reinforced blue plastic.  I sewed in a hollow PVC pipe and added a few more grommets.  I tied it to the lifelines and at the other side to a broomstick, which I have lashed to the bimini.  Of course it started to rain, which I was in the middle of it.  But this time, it actually helped me, as I could change things around to make it more efficient.  I put a plastic through-hull in the middle, added a clear tube which goes into a 25 liter container.  In the evening I had caught 260 liters of first class drinking water and our tanks were full to the brim.  Success! 
 
Before dinner a hot shower out of our trusty garden sprayer.  Extremely useful, that simple device.  We get by with less water than any other boat that we know.  And still have a hot shower every day, even while underway.  Absolutely no need for a water-maker or a ton of water in the tanks. 
 
Of course there are numerous problems as well.  A bilge pump I had bought and installed in Majuro died.  Ditto a float switch.  Amazing that they apparently can't build anything that really lasts on a boat.  Both engines and sail-drives are in need of a good mechanic, there are leaks all over the place and the headliner problem looks unbelievably ugly.  It is time for a proper boatyard. 
 
Therefore I have booked with http://www.norsand.co.nz/ , a boatyard in Whangarei.  They have been recommended by Kaspar & Steffi on CELUANN (Catana 43) as well as by another catamaran, NOUVELLE VIE II (Catana 47).  We intend to leave the boat on the hard there while we are spending Christmas and my parents' 50-year golden wedding anniversary on 23 January in Flensburg, Germany.  We have not decided yet whether we will have any work done in our absence, but we do have a connection with fellow yachtie Warrick from JEMELLIE.  He, his father in law and his friend (marine diesel mechanic) work on yachts in Whangarei when they are not out there sailing. 
 
Once the boat is ready and the weather is good, we might come back here for a while and then continue our circumnavigation across the Indian Ocean to South Africa, then across the Atlantic once more and finally back to the Caribbean.  But all that is far into the future and we have been known to change our plans now and again.  Who knows, we might sail to Asia and stay there for a while. 
Or we might stay down in the high latitudes and sail with the westerlies all the way back to the Marquesas.  Or even further. 
 
--
Holger Jacobsen
S/V DHARMA BUM III
YACHT-IN-TRANSIT
Port Vila, Vanuatu 

HolgSailing until now -- Tue., 21 Oktober 2008

Dharma Bum   I    4,558 nautical miles
Dharma Bum  II    5,709 nautical miles
Dharma Bum III   12,959 nautical miles
---------------------------------------------------------------
Until now        23,226 nautical miles
---------------------------------------------------------------
Circumnavigation 22,255 nautical miles (trades, shortest route)
Circumnavigation 30,000 nautical miles (our planned route)
 

Sunday, August 17, 2008

change of plans -- it's "down under" now

After a thorough study of weather information in the fifth edition of Jimmy Cornell's "World Cruising Routes" we reluctantly had to give up our original plans.  We had planned to sail all the way through Micronesia to end up in the Philippines or Taiwan at the end of November 2008.  We had then intended to leave DHARMA BUM III there, fly to Germany & spend Christmas and the 50-year wedding anniversary of my parents on 23 January 2009 in my hometown Flensburg. 
 
At route PN86 (p. 328) Palau to the Philippines it says:  "Best time January to March.  Tropical storms all year."  As well as "high risk of typhoons".  And at route PN95 (p. 334) Marshall Islands to the Carolines one can read: "Best time December to April.  Tropical storms all year."  That doesn't work for us either, as our visa here runs out on 4 September.  At US$ 300 for each additional month, a visa-extension does not sound all that attractive, anyway. 
 
We have had a typhoon make a direct hit on our house in Garden City in the outskirts of Taipei in September 1994.  The destruction was mind-blowing and I firmly believe that on a boat you have pretty much ZERO chance to survive such an onslaught.  I don't really care about all the stories of people who "survived a typhoon" on a sailboat.  None of them were anywhere near the center, which is surrounded by tornado-like winds (the German word is "Fallstrom" - it drove shards of glass THROUGH a piece of plywood, which I had put in the place where our bedroom window had been).  I am simply not willing to take that kind of risk.
 
Hence we have decided to sail due south - hard on the wind as usual - and spend the cyclone season in New Zealand.  That is about 3000 nautical miles (or 5555 kilometers) away and once we have crossed the equator, the winds will be even more on the nose.  So, just in case we can't make it, we'll probably have to apply for an Australian visa as well. 
 
We might stop-over in Kiribati and Fiji, but we know that one boat (AMULETTE, a monohull) gave up that plan and went to Vanuatu instead and another boat (HOLOKAI, a catamaran) had to motor quite a ways in a prolonged calm to make it to Fiji.  And both of those boats go to windward a lot better than our trusty DHARMA BUM III...
 
As to the future:  We just got an eMail from another boat which took part in the Sail Indonesia Rally, which was organized by http://www.sailindonesia.net/ in partnership with YCBI (Yayasan Cinta Bahari Indonesia).  Here is what they wrote: "Spent a month in Darwin & left for Kupang on Sail Indonesia, end of July. It was a complete mess & ended up with all 116 boats being impounded by customs for 7 days!  We were on an awful anchorage, boats dragged, ours got hit by the customs boat, (which had a dingy anchor for a 35' motor launch) & dinghies got turned over when they tried to go ashore! No one would say exactly what the trouble was & the atmosphere was awful. As we only joined up to get the paperwork sorted out for us it was a complete waste of time. We like many other boats left the rally as soon as we were allowed & are now in Bali."
 
I am not a big fan of these mass-events and this one removed my last doubts.  We'll go through the Torres Strait, cross the Indian Ocean like our friends Wolf & Doris aboard NOMAD http://www.seenomaden.at/ and head back towards the Caribbean. 
 
Right now we are waiting for an EPIRB emergency transmitter as well as a complete radio system, as my old long distance radio died of salty air and corrosion.  My friends tell me that I got a pretty good run for my money, as I had bought the radio in San Diego for DHARMA BUM II.  And that was in 1994.  Let's see how long the new one lasts.  :-) 

Monday, July 28, 2008

Eman! Eman!

Tuesday, 29 July 2008
 
Jokwe!
 
We are still in Majuro, RMI, and for a change the work on the boat is progressing nicely.  The reason is that I hired a professional boatbuilder who is helping me.  In fact, Ted from the trimaran SEQUESTER is doing most of the work, while I am handing him tools and such.  He determined that DHARMA BUM III does *NOT* have osmosis as I had originally feared.  It is just the paint blistering slightly as a result of being covered with algae and being wet for months at a time.  Hard to avoid when you are anchored in Betio, Tarawa, Kiribati...
 
With the help of some local friends, I got my hands on part of a net from a purse seiner.  (Thank you very much Anton!!!)  Exceptionally strong (it has to carry tons and tons and tons of fish) and black, it now has been converted to new trampolines for our boat.  Not only is it a lot safer than the original ones, it also looks better and offers way less resistance to the water than the white stuff the production builders use.  I have come to the conclusion that said material is only used so bikini-clad beauties can pose for pix in glossy sales brochures. 
 
Several people expressed an interest in perhaps buying our 12-meter Privilege catamaran from 1993.  And since I had no clue about the present market value of our boat, I did a bit of research on the Internet (thanks to Johnny at the Marshallese Broadcasting Corporation MBC).  Here's what I found: 
 
 
 
Escapeartist.com http://tinyurl.com/62sfj4 
 
For us this means that it is almost certainly worth our while to go to Asia (Taiwan, Philippines, Malaysia, Thailand...) and hire the experts over there to get DHARMA BUM III  back into top-condition before we try to sell the boat.  It probably also means that it will require a while until DHARMA BUM III is actually sold.  That is not really a problem, as we both love Asia anyway and Liping thinks that we could home-school Aurora Ulani for another five or six years if that is what it takes.  Who knows, we might even sail it back halfway around the world to get a better price over there.  I am certainly not going to sell it a lot under market value, no matter what happens. 
 
We are still waiting for a special battery which is being shipped from Hawaii and it looks as if I have to replace the two starter batteries as well.  The new furling Genoa from Lee Sails in Hong Kong is already up and looks very beautiful indeed.  Thanks to Ted the furler works better than ever, the forward-center-compartment is now self-draining, the hatches have almost all been resealed and various places have been re-fibreglassed.  We are thinking of putting no-return valves in front of all the goose-necks and have several more projects to occupy us before our visas run out in the beginning of September.  How does the saying go again?  Circumnavigating means repairing your boat in the most exotic locations.  ;-) 
 
I am also rigging up my ancient shortwave radio which I took off my previous boat.  We are not particularly "radio-active", but when entering the area west of Pohnpei, I want accurate weather information every day.  And I want to be able to communicate, mainly so that my parents don't worry - and also in case something does go wrong.  I have set up an eMail distribution system and once the radio is up and running, you should be able to track our daily position at http://www.pangolin.co.nz/yotreps/tracker.php?ident=KE6PIB (Kilo Echo Six Papa India Bravo is my HAM-radio callsign.)
 
We have already made contact with some people from Kosrae, where we are going to sail next.  And I met a guy right here at the Shoreline which I had met in Tonga in 1987 and again in 1995.  Small world.  He is now based in Pohnpei, the capital city of
FSM.  After that we'll perhaps visit Chuuk, Yap, and Palau, before heading towards the Philippines and/or Taiwan.  Unfortunately we won't be able to meet up with another longtime friend, as our schedule is extremely tight because of the typhoon season in Asia. 
 
~~~~~
 
Since 9 March 2008 Aurora Ulani has done 142 (of 160) Calvert School lessons.  That's 88% of the lessons for one year in only five months and she is thirsty for more!  As soon as we notice that she is beginning to have difficulties, we will slow down to only one lesson per day and perhaps even more to finally one school-year in one calendar-year.  As before, we will certainly listen to what the folks at Calvert have to say.  Their assessment and advice have been right on target! 
 
As for the outer islands, snorkeling, climbing palm trees, bonfires at the beach and all that, it will just have to wait.  There are more than ten big, delicious, juicy squid floating around under our boat and I am itching to get my hands on them.  Liping has already figured out where to get jiu ceng ta , a spice from Taiwan which gives the squid a very special flavor.  And on Sunday she is co-organizing a big to-do for children out at the Taiwan research farm cum fish-farm at the other end of the atoll in Laura.  The idea is to tell them about vegetables, flowers, wild plants, fish, animals and ecology at the various branches of the farm. 
 
 
--
Holger Jacobsen
S/V DHARMA BUM III
YACHT-IN-TRANSIT
P.O. Box 283
Majuro MH96960
Marshall Islands

Monday, June 23, 2008

No matter where you are going - there you are!

Majuro, Marshall Islands
Latitude: 07°06.18'N Longitude: 171°22.44'E
23 June 2008
 
I had to make an unscheduled dive in the middle of nowhere to free Anton's super-strong fishing line out of both props.  DHARMA BUM III was moving up and down like a high-speed elevator, while images of "Jaws" kept swimming through my consciousness.  It had to be done, though.  Mike Fallis had told me in the British Virgin Islands that the monofilament fishing line would melt, if I used the engine and that it would cause damage, if not removed immediately.  So in I went. 
 
The water was almost as clear as air and while I didn't see any sharks around - I guess by the time you see one of these pelagic sharks, it is pretty much too late anyway - there was a whole swarm of little pilot fish swimming between the two hulls.  Those were remarkably smooth, by the way, as we had beached the boat on Bikeman Island in Tarawa and gave it a proper cleaning.  Holding an extremely sharp diving knife in one hand (I did not want to get entangled in the almost invisible fishing line and drown myself in such an inconvenient place), it took me about twenty minutes to free my props.  I was very glad to be back aboard again. 
 
~~~~~
 
With two reefs in the main and the Genoa only about 50% unfurled, we set off again.  At best logging 153 nautical miles from noon to noon, it took us three days from Tarawa to just before Majuro, but as the wind had been blowing from the NNE, we were too far off to the west and had to start tacking.  Also, we decided to go the other way around the atoll and pass the Taiwan research farm in Laura.  The weather had been quite pleasant for a while, which is a bit unusual around here.  So far no big squalls and nothing breaking on the boat.  A very nice feeling, I can tell you!
 
About an hour after I had gotten off watch, these circumstances changed and we were faced with a powerful squall, which blew with up to 40 knots.  Also, it forced us to change our course, which was unacceptable as there was the outer reef in the way.  So, instead of fighting against it and tacking like crazy - hard work, you know - we decided to take all sail down and get some rest instead. 
 
As soon as it got light, we could see that the skies looked very ominous indeed.  Although there was no squall nearby, it was overcast in every direction all the way to the horizon and the clouds appeared torn and tattered.  Not good.  Did we perhaps miss a bit of "pink haze" the evening before?  Anyway, if we wanted to make it in daylight to the mooring field, we had to get going. 
 
You can probably imagine what happened next...   Right, as soon as we were inside the pass, a squall with maximum windspeeds of 45 knots came from dead ahead.  Although I had both engines (two 40 HP Volvos) running almost at full tilt, we made zero progress.  The tidal current combined with the force of the squall were simply too much.  Fortunately we weren't driven backwards either, but I still kept hoping for all this nonsense to end.  That took a full two hours, which we consider slightly overdoing it.  I had been wearing diving goggles, peering ahead to look for purse seiners, ferries or other ships, was soaked to the bone, shivering and exhausted.  Moreover, I seemed to be getting seriously sick.  Muscle pain everywhere, sore throat, headache, couldn't breathe - the works. 
 
I was extremely grateful when the wind went down to about 30 knots and Liping offered to take over.  In spite of all the mayhem, I went straight to bed and fell asleep.  When I woke up, I called Jerry on PO'O INAROA to ask whether he could assist with picking up the mooring.  I wasn't sure whether I could have handled it alone.  If nobody would have had time for that, I would have dropped the anchor and waited until I felt better.  Fortunately Jerry was as helpful as always. 
 
When he saw the state the boat was in, his comment was something like:  "Oh boy!  Looks like you have lots of things to play with in the next few days."  The bow was strangely deep in the water, the stern correspondingly high up, the trampolines were torn again, and the chain had escaped once more through the holes where the water should drain out of the anchor locker.  But all that had to wait.  I was simply too sick and tired. 
 
It took almost two weeks for that to get better and I was seriously considering to go to the doc.  And then there was my good friend from Nauru, Johnny Willis, displaying symptoms similar to those of my friend Huang Jianhong in Tarawa, who had been diagnosed with dengue fever.  Fortunately Johnny didn't have it. 

The only thing we did those first few weeks was to go to the party celebrating the Dragonboat Festival, which the people from Taiwan celebrated at the Uliga restaurant.  For the first time in many years, I could not avoid chewing betelnut and drinking twelve year old Johnny Walker Black Label.  It was only a very small sacrifice.  ;-)  Another thing we did, was visit Huang Jianhong's brother Huang Jianming to deliver a box of dried sea-cucumbers (bêche-de-mer) and other delicacies from Kiribati.  I pumped out about 1134 liters of water from the forward starboard compartment and soon found out why it was in there.  Not only had the through-hull become loose and let in incredible amounts of water, but the wire of the "Rule-A Matic" float switch had corroded right in the middle, which was the end of that particular bilge-pump system.  I was beginning to get seriously annoyed with said float-switches and vowed to change to another brand as soon as humanly possible. 
 
This has been done by now and hopefully I won't have any similar troubles again.  (Ha! Ha!  It's a boat, remember?  And b-o-a-t is a four letter word for a reason!  ;-))  On 18 June my 48th birthday was coming up and we decided to celebrate it with only a few local friends on DHARMA BUM III.  We cleaned out the gigantic Igloo Marine 94 cooler and proceeded to fill it with Sake from Japan, sparkling wine, white wine, red wine (all from Australia), numerous bottles of homebrew and XXXX-Bitter, Johnny Walker, Vodka and the like.  And, of course, copious quantities of ice to keep things nicely cold.  Soon we had eleven people from six nations on board:  Vincent Reimers from the Marshall Islands, Johnny Willis and his children from Nauru, ambassador Bruce J.D. Linghu from Taiwan, American Russ from the yacht HUEGELIG, three refrigeration specialists from the Philippines and ourselves.  Most of the guests had either brought more drinks or food, so that we could have started another party the next day without having to re-supply.  The conversation was lively and the Filipino-style liver-and-tongue dish, as well as the Tongan curry and a Chinese-style Chicken soup with ginger and rice a la Liping had everybody going for seconds.  Nobody went home hungry, that's for sure.  Still, it was the middle of the week and everybody had to go to work.  The last guests left around 10:30 pm and by midnight we went to bed as well.  A great party and a wonderful day, even if I do say so myself. 
 
A surprise arrived by eMail from Lee Sails in Hong Kong.  Although they had budgeted eight weeks for the building of my new Genoa, they had it ready for shipping in only three weeks!  A most remarkable company.  The next few weeks, we will mostly work on the boat, spend time with our local friends and teach our (by now almost 4 1/2 year old) daughter Aurora Ulani.  Today she finished lesson 101 of Calvert School and we are absolutely amazed at how well organized and thought-out the lesson plans and teaching materials are.  We are both teachers and we don't say this lightly.  In fact, the only other system that has me similarly impressed is the Cambridge University / Royal Society of Arts (RSA/UCLES) course for teacher-training and certification.  Both of these outfits come with our very highest recommendations. 
 
Anyway, our little sailor-girl has another 59 lessons to go before going on to the next grade.  She can hardly wait and often begs us to speed up the process.  Still, English is but her second language and her Mandarin-Chinese is *way* better than her English.  And although I start reading German to her every day even before breakfast, her third language is sadly lacking behind.  Still, we are stubborn - persistent? - and we won't stop teaching her all three languages as long as she seems to be able to handle it.  So far, so surprisingly good. 
 
~~~~~
 
Once our floating home is reasonably ship-shape again, we'll set off for Kosrae, Pohnpei, Chuuk, Yap, Palau and the Philippines.  As the western part of the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM) is in the typhoon belt, we have to be very careful with our timing.  I just heard on the BBC World Service, that several people died in the Philippines as a result of a typhoon.  
 
Then there is our upcoming visit to Germany to consider.  I haven't seen my parents and three brothers for four years.  We would like to spend Christmas as well as the 50-year wedding anniversary of my parents with them.  We might leave the boat in the Philippines or we might leave it in Taiwan.  If we get a reasonable offer, we might even sell it.  Visa and logistics pose more than the usual problems, so in that respect it would be easiest to do everything in Kaohsiung, Taiwan.  Liping hasn't seen her family in four years either and in Taiwan she can get the ever growing mountain of required documents and permits a lot easier then elsewhere.  And slowly we have to start thinking about setting up a business again, whether in Kunming, somewhere else in China, Vietnam, Taiwan or maybe even in Germany. 
 
Thanks to the monthly newsletter of Bill Gross from PIMCO, I wasn't caught with my pants down during the recent financial unpleasantness.  The slide of the dollar was wholly expected and taken advantage of.  However, commodities prices are skyrocketing and we still have to put our daughter through school, university, grad-school and all that.  And although theoretically (very important word, that) we could live on the boat for another 40 years or so before our money runs out, we both don't feel comfortable doing that.  What if we smash the boat on a reef somewhere?  What if we suddenly have major unexpected expenses?  It goes on and on.  And while I am confident that I could start from scratch at 50, I wouldn't want to try that at 60.  And I certainly wouldn't want to live on a boat at 70, although some of my yachtie-friends are older than that and are still doing fine.  (Now I know what ambassador Bruce meant, when he said that I worry too much :-)  
 
I don't even really know what I *want*.  Is it really that important to assuage the feeling of homesickness I have for the nature, black bread, and customs in Germany?  (It's been 26 years, after all...)  Is it worth to endure decades of cold feet, miserable weather, absurd government regulations and an astronomical cost of living, just so that Aurora Ulani can grow up in Germany?  On the other hand, do I really want to live in foreign countries forever, never getting more than the gist of a conversation and feeling more and more alienated and lonely with each coming year?  Right now, I feel like throwing the dice as Liping is willing to go wherever I would like to go.  What was that again?  "Life is what happens to you while you are busy making plans."  Yeah, right. 
 
~~~~~
 
Ever read "The Stone Canal" by Ken MacLeod?  By no means new, published in 1996, and I just re-read if for the third or fourth time.  I wish I had the two main characters here in the "Shoreline" pub over a substantial amount of Coopers Homebrew to talk for a fortnight about the universe and everything.  Not that this would solve much, but it could be amusing and one or two new thoughts might be unearthed.  Well, I am sure Anton, Johnny, Vincent and the rest of the boys will be there tonight.  I am looking forward to that. 
 
--
Holger Jacobsen
S/V DHARMA BUM III
YACHT-IN-TRANSIT
P.O. Box 283
Majuro MH96960
Marshall Islands

Saturday, May 24, 2008

Repairs, New Friends & Tuna Fishing

Betio, Tarawa, Kiribati
Sunday, 25 May 2008
 
The trip down from Majuro resulted in a totally destroyed (not repairable) Mylar-jib and once more a ripped Genoa.  Also, the leaks were getting so bad, that our navigation computer died twice, but somehow I could miraculously revive it with some electronic CPR.  As usual we were hard on the wind, which resulted not only in our two trampolines being ripped, but also in the automatic bilge pump flying through the starboard engine room. 
 
All in all, we spent two days and 16 hours adrift.  The first day was the result of Aurora Ulani being continuously seasick for two days, so that I decided to give her a break.  That strategy worked out fine and she didn't get seasick again.  The rest of the time adrift, we spent fixing sails. 
 
Of course we arrived outside Tarawa in the middle of the night, so that we had to take down sails once more.  And in the morning a violent squall with massive amounts of rain announced our arrival to our friends here.  I was reminded of Nigel on SPINALONGA,who had said in Suva:  "Remind me to never to go sailing with you, Holger.  You are amazingly unlucky!"  And Kaspar on CELUANN had complained that he had to motor 20 hours per day, as there was absolutely no wind.  Sometimes I wonder whether we live in a parallel-universe.
 
When clearing in with customs and immigration, I was dismayed to hear that we would only be allowed to stay for 30 days.  We could, however, apply for an extension, which would cost A$ 60 per person.  Then we'd have altogether four months in Kiribati.  We visited our various friends on the island and went to the run of the Kiribati Hash House Harriers.  I went over to the Wishing Star Restaurant in order to deliver a parcel to Huang Jianhong which his brother Huang Jianming had given me in Majuro.  Soon we became fast friends.  He was very interested in DHARMA BUM III, so that we had him aboard, where he had a good look around. 
 
Hong came here quite a few years ago from Canton province, married a local beauty and started supplying the outer islands with necessities.  He also began to import motorcycles from China, opened up a wholesale as well as a retail-outlet and a restaurant.  Soon he found himself so busy you wouldn't believe.  Almost all his waking hours are spent working and at the same time he and his family live in the most spartan accommodation imaginable.  And his friend Mei Songping, who has a little shop at the harbor, is not only running his own business, but working as a construction laborer as well.  Hong has three relatives over here now, as well as quite a few more employees from his wife's side.  He is still young, maybe around 30, and is making around 10,000 to 15,000 dollars per month, depending on how things are going.  His latest venture is exporting "rubbish" as he calls it, to Taiwan. 
 
He is one of the most hospitable and generous people we have ever met and he is interested in everything around him.  He also is a proud father of a two-year-old boy, who runs all over the place.  And his wife isn't only a beauty, but works just as hard as he does, always with a smile on her face - and time for friends.  It is people like these, probably more than anything else, that make us want to continue with this lifestyle.  Getting to know them is what makes all the hard work and the anxiety worth it. 
 
The next few days we spent a lot of time together.  He offered us the use of his car, invited us again and again into his home, where we were welcome to use his washing machine and his coconut wireless (the local WiFi system, which works similar to a DSL network).  It was very welcome, as we had come to the conclusion that we really needed to get a new headsail.  I ordered a brand-new custom-made roller-furling genoa at Lee Sails in Hong Kong.  At US$ 1400 it was only a fraction of the cost what a sail of similar quality would cost in North America, Europe, Australia or New Zealand.  And to my surprise, it was cheaper to have it sent by FedEx (US$ 245) than to have it delivered by ship.  A yachtie friend, which I had got to know 1987 in Tonga and who now lives in the Philippines, urged me to have all boat materials shipped to Majuro, as the import duty in the Philippines is very high.  Other friends reported that Vanuatu, the Solomons and New Caledonia were either very expensive, unsafe or unsuitable for other reasons.  Like rampant theft, crime, malaria, salt-water crocodiles and so on. 
 
So we made the decision to sail back to Majuro, pick up the sail around 24 July and then slowly sail to Kosrae, Pohnpei, Chuuk, Yap (Federated States of Micronesia, FSM) and Palau to the Philippines.  We plan to visit our friend there, leave the boat and fly to Germany, where we intend to spend Christmas and my parents' 50-year wedding anniversary in January 2009. 
 
As the prices for braided nylon rope were astronomical (Hong almost threw a fit and said that you could buy a motorcycle for that amount of money), I only made temporary repairs with two rolls of polypropylene line and determined to have proper repairs done elsewhere.  I removed the alternator on the starboard engine and replaced a bolt, which was eating up the belt.  I fixed the float-switch/bilge-pump assembly (hopefully permanently this time) and did numerous other repairs on the boat.  For almost a month, we worked seven days a week and I thought longingly of the time when I ran a business and had Sundays off.  What luxury! 
 
Full moon and therefore big tidal differences approached, so we decided to go to Bikeman Island, where we would try to beach the boat to effect repairs on the saildrive.  That is risky business, because you have to time things just right as you actually go on top of the reef.  Also, you always have to worry about a wind-shift, waves which will slam your boat upon the ground and various other things.  From then on I didn't sleep too well. 
 
All of a sudden the wind died completely.  I talked with Tom on VANESSA, who told me that the green freighter which graced the reef  behind us had been wrecked just before our second arrival.  Violent squall, the anchor didn't hold, the engine couldn't get started in time.  The result is a total loss.  Another one.  I counted 13 big wrecks in our immediate vicinity.  Wow! 
 
When the wind picked up again, it came from the west, which really started to alarm me.  Whereas squalls rarely last for more than a few hours, a Westerly (gale from the West) can last three days to a week.  Windspeeds can go up all the way to 50 knots and by the time you realize what is going on, it is usually too late to go out through the pass to seek open water. 
 
But as the sky didn't turn black in the west, we still pulled up our anchor and motored over to Bikeman Island.  We checked out the vicinity by dinghy and found two places, which seemed to be suitable for our purposes.  The next morning we started to get ready in the dark and approached the small island as soon as we could see the coral-heads.  All went well.  At 7:20 a.m. we were aground and just a little while later DHARMA BUM III stopped rocking, so that we could get to work.  While Liping cleaned the hulls, I tried to replace the seals on the saildrive.  Unfortunately the water never fell low enough.  The highest tides were during the night and I wasn't going to risk staying there that long.  Also, I simply couldn't undo the bolt which held the propeller in place.  This probably means that the boat has to come completely out of the water in a place where competent mechanics can tackle the problem.  Another Boat Unit or two down the drain (That's what Doris and Wolf on NOMAD http://www.seenomaden.at & http://www.yacht.de/schenk/who/who31.html call € 1000) 
 
When the biweekly Billfishing tournament came up, Craig (the ambassador of New Zealand) invited me to come along.  Instead of going through the pass, we went through a tiny crack in the reef where the causeway between Betio and Bairiki had been built.  The big 175 HP Yamaha scraped a few times across the bottom, but we made it just in time.  The sea was a bit lumpy and so we slammed around quite a bit.  Fortunately Mac, an I-Kiribati who was driving the launch, was not one of these madmen who disregard nature and so he throttled down considerably.  As soon as we were about halfway between Maiana (the next atoll) and Tarawa, we threw out some handlines with double hooks and rubber squid.  Soon Mac caught the first Skipjack tuna and at 8:00 o'clock I hooked my first one.  After another 40 minutes I got my second one - and that's when I realized what Craig had meant when saying that you either have to have Kiribati hands  -  or gloves.  The fish was so strong that the line cut right into my hand and I had no chance to hold on to it.  This didn't pose a problem for Mac.  He simply grabbed the line with his bare hands and reeled the fish in. 
 
All in all we caught four Skipjack and I learned a lot about the Kiribati way of fishing.  No wonder these guys can drift for months in the open ocean and usually still survive.  They are truly master fisherman and as fishing is the reason why they are out there, they have all the necessary fishing equipment for survival on board.  A Westerner or any other city-person would perish within a few days, that's for sure.  They have long poles which they use for jigging, saving fuel thereby.  The have big shark buoys which they use to catch sharks and of course the have the usual trolling equipment. 
 
Back on board DHARMA BUM III, we had raw tuna as sashimi, but somehow we couldn't make it as delicious as Anton deBrum & Johnny Willis did it in Majuro.  We have a lot to learn!  The rest of the fish was converted into German-style fish-balls, but again the taste didn't quite come up to our expectations.  With the fish as fresh as it was, it puzzled us.  Maybe it should be bled, so that the fish-blood can't contaminate the meat?  We'll have to find out, as we are pretty sure now, that we will be able to catch this kind of fish during our next few trips.  The big purse seiners we saw here last time, apparently follow the migration of the schools of tuna and are currently in Papua New Guinea (PNG). 
 
We have a couple more things to do on the boat, but in just a few days we will set sail for the Marshall Islands once more, where we hope to arrive somewhere between 7 June and 10 June.  Leaving is a bit of a sad affair this time, as it is very unlikely that we will ever see our friends here again.  But we sure as hell won't forget them.  We will talk about them for many years to come. 

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Sunday, April 06, 2008

Three Months in Majuro, Marshall Islands

Latitude: 07°06.19'N  Longitude: 171°22.44'E

The last three months were so full of experiences, that I hardly found time to write.  One of the reasons was the arrival of our friends Kaspar & Steffi aboard their Catana 43 catamaran CÉLUANN.  We spent almost every day together and when the time came for us to sail our separate ways, we had more than the usual lump in our throat.  Aurora Ulani especially missed Steffi and talked for days and weeks about her. 

Just after they had got here, we all went to visit the Taiwan-Farm in Laura at the other end of the atoll.  Apart from growing all kinds of vegetables - a difficult job on an atoll - they also raise fish, chickens and pigs, partly because of the fertilizer.  We spent an interesting day & when we were finally completely overloaded with new impressions, we all went back to Majuro together to go to the big Taiwan barbecue-party celebrating Chinese Lantern Festival. 
 
Unfortunately rain was pouring down like you wouldn't believe, but that didn't dampen the mood one little bit.  Ambassador Bruce J.D. Linghu introduced us to a lot of people, most of whom came from Taiwan originally.  However, he also introduced us to Tony, which was extremely fortunate.  Tony is the American captain of a purse seiner owned by a Taiwanese company.  When Kaspar talked to him during the party, he got us all invited for a visit on the AMERICAN EAGLE the next day. 
 
We showed up with two dinghies (after I stupidly went a long way to find out that I had gone to the wrong ship :-) and as the fetch just a few hundred meters offshore is quite considerable, we didn't really know how in hell we would be able to scramble up the side of the ship, especially with a freaked-out four year old to take care of.  Although Aurora Ulani is used to dinghy rides as other children are used to trips by car, she was definitely *not* used to the very bumpy ride out in the middle of the lagoon. 
 
We needn't have worried.  Instead of us having to scramble up precariously, they simply lowered a boat by crane.  We climbed into the boat and the whole shebang was winched up electrically.  I tell you, I am becoming very partial to electric winches, especially after I found out, that Kaspar can do almost everything on his boat with just one big electrical winch.  Also, if he has no power, he can still operate it by hand, just like I work with my winches. 
 
Anyway, here we were.  AMERICAN EAGLE was docked alongside a Korean cooling ship with gigantic black fenders between the two ships.  Cargo nets filled with many tons of frozen skipjack-tuna were going continuously from the hold of the purse seiner into that one of the cooling ship.  Although this was going very fast - time after all being money - Tony told us that it would take several days to unload his ship.  The fish is kept frozen in a brine of salt, ice and water and ends up in fish factories in Thailand. 
 
Captain Tony took many hours of his precious time to show us around and answer our myriad questions with detailed explanations.  He is the only American on board and apart from a couple of Taiwanese and one Filipino all the other crew members are from China.  Altogether there were 43 people on board, but sometimes there are as many as 50.  We were quite surprised to hear that the highest paid person on board was not the captain, but the guy who is in charge of finding the fish.  More on that later.  And since we already knew that a captain on a purse seiner makes around US$ 300 000 a year, we naturally wondered how much those guys must be making.  We were told that it takes only one to three years to amortize the vessel including helicopter, electronics, nets and all the rest.  If, that is, the vessel is registered under the Taiwan flag or something similar.  Flying the American flag it would be more like ten years.  Still not a bad deal, I reckon.  Not a bad deal at all.  Oh, yeah, and the guy finding the fish makes about 40 million Taiwan Dollar (ca. US$ 1.3 million) during his three-year contract.  I guess he still has a few pennies left over even though the dollar continues to fall (mark my words ;-). 
 
Understandably no expense is spared when it gets to finding and catching the fish.  The array of electronics on the bridge looks almost more impressive than that on a modern warship.  I am not just saying that.  We visited three warships and had a very close look at them while they were here in Majuro.  On the big 12/16 miles radar you can even see birds diving to the surface to catch bait-fish.  Tony calmed Kaspar and my fears that we would ever get overrun by one of these ships.  There is simply no way that this could happen, as it is of absolutely prime importance for these guys that they see what is happening in the seas around them.  Otherwise no fish.  And no money.  Every important piece of equipment has a backup - and another backup just to be safe.  ("The Ramans do everything in threes" I thought, remembering the late Arthur C. Clarke)
 
Of course there were various means of communication (mostly via satellite), again with backups in place.  Four times a day they get a phone call via Inmarsat from the head office in Taiwan, as they need the most up-to-date information possible to make the right decision in this very competitive game.  Reminds me of the professional traders who pay Reuters and similar agencies zillions of dollars to get the information a few fractions of a second earlier then the competition.   In this case there are radio-buoys and their expensive brothers, the GPS radio-buoys (those cost around 2 000 bucks a piece) which are floating all over the place near schools of fish and fish attracting devices.  These buoys are transmitting on frequencies kept secret and are found again with very sensitive radio direction finders (RDF).  If a ship comes across one of these buoys by accident, they usually "steal" them and put their own buoys in their place instead.  Usually these buoys get traded back and forth amongst competing vessels.  Later we heard from a fishing inspector, that things can get a lot worse than that.  The escalation ladder begins with the destruction of equipment like nets, continues with attacks on "enemy" crew members with machetes (Cutlasses?  I thought those times were past!) and even shootings.  It really is one of the last frontiers out there. 
 
Next, Tony showed us the server room.  I kid you not; it rivals the one of a medium sized Internet Service Provider (ISP).  I should know, because I spent months working in one of them, being greeted almost every morning by a pleasant female voice with a Californian accent which said, "Attention!  Attention!  The Sun Netra Internet Server is going to reconfigure itself ... System resources are now available."  But back to the boat...
 
The ship stays out for three years in a row and then goes back to Taiwan for three months.  It gets refurbished in its own shipyard and then has to rendezvous about 35 miles offshore to take on new crew which are not allowed to go ashore in Taiwan.  I guess illegal immigration is becoming more and more of a problem.  The next three years most of the supplies and food are being brought over by dedicated supply-ships.  This way the crew get the food that they are accustomed to and of course it is also way cheaper than buying produce locally.  As Tony isn't very keen on eating *only* Chinese food (what's wrong with him, anyway ;-), he has arranged his own supply, catering to his more American tastes. 
 
Tony surprised us by saying that he thinks the best thing would be to have a world-wide three-months moratorium on tuna fishing every year, so that the schools of tuna have time enough to replenish themselves.  While he doesn't think that purse seining will cause the extinction of the skipjack tuna, he certainly thinks that it is severely over-fished and will probably cause his profession to become financially non-viable sooner or later.  And that is one thing he would very much like to avoid as he loves fishing just like his father and grandfather did.  That reminds me very much of what Redmond O'Hanlon wrote in his book "Trawler" (after "In Trouble Again" my favorite book of this extraordinary author; recommended to me by my professor Lon Otto at the Iowa Summer Writing Festival in 1998).  I can't recommend Redmond O'Hanlon highly enough. 
 
Another surprise is the way in which you become captain on a ship like AMERICAN EAGLE.  Very different to the German cargo-ship MS EIDER I sailed to Leningrad on in 1979.  Those days, I was a decks-hand, the lowest of the low.  And the way up consisted of going to school, learning all there is about ships and shipping, working on a ship again to gain experience, go back to school and then work all the way up through the licenses, always alternating school and job.  After a few years as first mate, one might then end up as a captain.  Not so on a purse seiner.  All of the training is done onboard and every officer once started at the very bottom.  Obviously, not everybody ends up at the very top.  
 
After looking at the crew-mess, where we noticed some bedding on the floor, we were shown the helicopter, mostly used for scouting for schools of fish and the power-block, nets and so on.  Once a school of tuna have been located, several "small" boats with strong diesel engines drag the boat all the way around the fish.  It is very important that the net stays in the right shape (I envision something like a sphere), so that the fish can continue to swim around in ever tighter circles to stay alive as long as possible.  If they panic and subsequently die, they immediately sink to the bottom, where they act as an undesirable weight, pulling the net out of shape and ruin the "set".  Incidentally, that is also the reason, why the fishermen don't want any dolphins or porpoises (more common in cold waters and mostly near land) around.  If they happen to get into the net, they panic and die (although they could easily jump over the top of the net), thus spooking the tuna who in turn panic and die.  However, dolphins usually are found above the schools of tuna.  Fortunately they seem to have learned that fishing vessels are very bad news indeed and usually take off when they hear one approaching.  Tony is absolutely convinced that they are able to communicate this knowledge to other dolphins and thus warn them away. 
 
Although it takes less than half an hour to deploy the net, the whole "set" takes three to four hours, where the utmost care is taken to keep the net in perfect shape.  And one "set" typically nets 300 to 400 tons of Skipjack.  A Korean captain told us on the slip in Suva, that sometimes they manage to haul 1 000 tons of fish in a single operation.  Amazing!  Am I glad that I am not a tuna.
 
Of course we also had to have a look at the little helicopter.  I would not like to go up in one of those.  When I imagine the hair raising landing maneuvers even in normal weather and fishing operations I feel my toes curl.  And of course the weather isn't always benign.  Never mind that the helicopter pilot has to play the "game" with the radio-buoys as well.  I certainly prefer to have the solid ground of DHARMA BUM III  under my feet, that's for sure. 
 
Kaspar climbed up all the way to the top of the tower.  At least that was his intention, but he couldn't find the door to get to the last part and had to come down again to ask.  Tony readily explained, but Kaspar still wasn't successful.  On the fourth ascent (a bundle of energy, our Kaschperli :-) he finally ascertained that the door was in the back and was most definitely locked.  Tony didn't have the key and Kaspar wondered for the rest of the day, whether he was the object of a practical joke or not. 
 
While Kaspar was doing his acrobatic exercises, Steffi, Liping & I listened to Tony relate an incident where he had fished three I-Kiribati out of the ocean.  They had been drifting for quite a few months (!!!) already.  The oldest guys was "a bit shaky on his legs", while the two younger ones were described as "top-fit".  They had fishing equipment in their dinghy and a few drinking nuts, just like most I-Kiribati do.  That was all.  And since we had heard numerous stories like this in Tarawa and even met a few of the participants, we were quite sure that this was not sailors yarn, but pure and brutal fact.  Some of those guys had drifted all the way to Panama!  Utterly astonishing how these Micronesians can manage when they are in their environment.  Your average city-dweller would last only a few days in a situation like that.  He might have cleaned the fuel filter and motored home, though. 
 
Finally we were presented with a huge Mahi Mahi (Dorado, Dolphinfish or Coryphaena hippuris) and a just-as-big Wahoo (Tazzard, belongs to the family of marlins and swordfish, Acanthocybium solandri).  As well as steamed bread Chinese style, like Mantou, Baozi and similar delicacies.  Together with the 120 fresh farm eggs we were given the day before, we really did not have to worry about food for a while.  Quite the contrary, as our fridge is comparatively small.  But what a day!  There is just no way in hell that ordinary land-based life can be as interesting as this.  So while we often think of chucking the whole thing, we find ourselves continuing and even contemplating to spend another whole year in this area. 
 
~~~~~
 
The next highlight (if I wanted to describe all the interesting things that are happening here, I would have to turn this into a full-time job :-) was the visit of the Taiwan Navy.  At the beginning, things didn't look too good, as their arrival had to be postponed twice.  Later we found out the reason for this.  And when the three gray warships finally arrived, it was so early that we hadn't even finished our breakfast (I admit, our family is more of the brunch-variety).  CÉLUANN had already left for Tarawa, but Walter and Gisela on ATLANTIS had just come back from the outer islands.  So we called them on the VHF and went together to have a look at the ships.  
 
First we had a look at the big supply ship, where a Captain's Dinner was planned for the evening.  It was going to be held on the helipad in back of the ship.  Originally planned for the President of the Marshall Islands, Litokwa Tomein, Foreign Minister Tony deBrum and other high officials as well as the leading members of the Taiwan community here, we had received an invitation from Ambassador Bruce J.D. Linghu.  Rear Admiral Chen and Ambassador Bruce J.D. Linghu were going to co-host the dinner and we were really looking forward to it.  Next in line was a frigate of the Chenggong class (Made in the USA and modified in Kaohsiung), which was alongside the supply ship and a destroyer of the Lafayette class (Made in France), which was docked behind. 
 
There had been quite a scandal about the purchase of the destroyers of the Lafayette class in Taiwan.  Some absolutely astonishing amounts of money went missing and were never found again.  Also, I gather that China was furious with the French for selling these ships to Taiwan in the first place.  Well, here was one of them now. 
 
These ships move through the sea with a top speed of about 25 knots, but as one of the ships had developed a bit of a problem with one of the engines, the whole convoy had to slow down which explained the late arrival.  The weather may have played a role there as well.  For us sailors who reckon a day making good 100 nautical miles is not bad, that is a pretty fast.  And a modern nuclear submarine is capable of sustaining 50 knots for long periods of time.  Or so I gather when considering how fast the damn things can cross an ocean. 
 
The most impressive part was the Phalanx anti missile system and the similar one on the destroyer.  Completely automatic and guided by target radar, it can shoot up to 4500 rounds per minute to destroy incoming missiles.  The missiles themselves were also pretty scary, both the SAM variety as well as their big brothers which are aimed at enemy warships.  Even those big guys can be sent away with the speed of six missiles per minute.  They remind me very much of cruise missiles and I guess they share the same ancestry.  Don't have a clue about all this stuff, really. 
 
What I found remarkable was the fact that the destroyer was powered by four engines.  It has two feathering screws, making a bow-thruster unnecessary and it is possible to do maintenance on two engines, while the ship goes on with the other two engines.  At full speed ahead all four engines are running.  In the back there is a housing for a huge attack helicopter, which gets in and out via a system of tracks.  And last, but most certainly not least, the Lafayette is constructed in such a way, that it only gives a very small radar echo, looking like a very small craft on the screen. 
 
When Walter asked one of the officers what would happen in a real firefight as they all had similar weapons systems, the officer replied:  "Whoever shoots first, has the best chances."  Gives one pause, doesn't it? 
 
Aurora Ulani had about enough of all this military stuff and so we took off to let her take a rest on board.  Later Patrick Wang, a former member of the Taiwan parliament, called and drove us as well as Walter and Gisela to the Captain's Dinner.  (A German told my father it was *impossible* for us to be invited to a Captain's Dinner aboard a real warship ;-As the President was there, it was quite formal in the beginning, but loosened up considerably later on.  The President even danced with one of the female Navy officers, people mingled and Taiwan beer flowed in quantity.  Kaoliang (extremely strong alcohol distilled from a sorghum plant in Taiwan) was provided, as well as wine and all that may have helped a bit.  Ambassador Bruce J.D. Linghu introduced me to Rear Admiral Chen, but most of the time I talked with Ching-Ming Chan, the commanding officer of the Lafayette destroyer PFG-1203.  He looked to be about my age (although I am notoriously bad at guessing ages, especially of Chinese people) and I wondered how he could have attained such a high position at such a young age.  Only later it dawned on me that I am no spring chicken anymore and that it is quite normal for people in his position to be my age ("Time is running out, Holg!  If you want to achieve anything at all, you'd better start the afterburners..." an evil voice whispered in my mind at that moment).
 
As it turned out, he was absolutely fascinated by our lifestyle and kept complimenting me.   Then again, he might have anticipated my feelings and tried his very best to put me at ease.  ;-)  Unfortunately that interesting evening came to an end leaving me and Liping to talk until very late at night in our cockpit.  We almost always do that.  Relating experiences, thoughts, trying to understand more and in doing so coming ever closer to each other.  Sometimes these discussions can become quite heated, but always they are interesting. 
 
There were many more interesting days and evenings.  Steffi had offered to teach our Taiwan friends Italian style cooking.  She had studied at a Hotelfachschule in Germany and later visited famous chefs all over Europe to learn some more.  Then she switched careers and worked as an air stewardess for Lufthansa.  In any case, her cooking was fabulous. 
 
Men were banned from the kitchen and the whole cooking event, but as there was plenty of food at the end of it, we were then invited to partake in it, together with Bruce and various other husbands.  Later the women from Taiwan reciprocated by teaching Steffi Chinese style cuisine and Bruce invited us all to his home for the sampling.  That, too, was wonderful.  And when I say that, I am not only talking of the food.  The conversation was always very lively and interesting.  So, of course, we invited Bruce, Albert (runs the fish farm) & his wife and chief cook Debbie to DHARMA BUM III for dinner one evening.  Again, an unqualified success. 
 
Then, one day, I got introduced to a circle of friends from Nauru, Kosrae (Federated States of Micronesia, FSM) and the Marshall Islands.  They meet in Johnny's garden for a Saturday evening barbecue or a bowl of really fresh and magically tasting Sashimi made from skipjack tuna.  Did you know that the taste will change within 30 minutes?  You can't buy that stuff anywhere in the world.  If you don't eat it within that timeframe, you simply don't know what *real* good Sashimi tastes like.  Johnny came out to the boat and tested the first batch of extraordinary dark homebrew. 
 
CÉLUANN and ATLANTIS are still in Kiribati and in less than two weeks we will have to leave here too.  But this time not for good.  We like it here so much, that we intend to check out the outer islands in Kirbati and then come back here.  And if all goes well ("Houston.  We have a problem..." ;-), we'll spend some time in the outer islands of the Marshalls as well.  Beginning of November we might set sail for the Philippines, but that is still so far away that all kinds of things might happen until then. 
 
Aurora Ulani is going through two lessons of Calvert School every day.  Seven days a week.  And when class-time is over, she usually asks when she can continue to learn.  Unless things change drastically for us, we will continue with the Calvert-system for another three to six years.  That would mean all the way to the end of elementary school for her.  If she loses a year or two then to have to get used to "normal" school in a different language, it doesn't really bother us.  She will have a rock-solid foundation by then, she will have seen so many different places and experienced a multitude of cultures, that we think she will be much the better for it.  And what did Captain Fatty Goodlander of WILDCARD (his son is a third generation boat brat) say again, when we told him of our fear that she may grow up different?  "What's wrong with being a weirdo?"  We are beginning to suspect that he might have a point. 
 
Anyway, the sun is shining, a new boat just came in and I want to go out and see my friends.  It is Sunday after all! 
 
Monday, 7 April 2008
 
My friends prepared a stupendous barbecue yesterday.  If every person from Nauru (Naoero) or the Marshall Islands eats like this, then I may have to settle down in one of these places.  Anton had caught loads of fish, from Wahoo and squid over surgeonfish to various species I didn't recognize.  Some Marshallese had brought two live chickens over to Johnny and somebody else had brought along spare ribs as well.  A huge pot of chicken soup was slowly bubbling over the fire, there was plenty of rice, somebody had provided homemade potato chips and we felt kind of ashamed for only bringing along a few liters of homebrew (albeit excellent) and a gigantic bowl of homemade popcorn flavored with salt and cheese, as well as vodka-tonics and soft drinks. 
 
Naturally a squall came our way as we were in the middle of barbecuing all the fish above the stainless steel drum of a washing machine, which was covered by a stainless steel grille fitted exactly onto the top.  The rain wasn't a problem, as we simply put a big piece of plywood over the barbecue and retired to Johnny's porch.  All but Jeff, that is, as he had been swimming in the lagoon and took the chance for a prolonged shower with abundant fresh water. 
 
The children were playing in the neighbors yard, but Aurora Ulani didn't really want to join as the games were pretty wild and rough.  She didn't understand anything either, as they were speaking Nauruan or Marshallese.  But in the house behind Johnny Willis lives Monica from China, who owns a restaurant across the street.  Sure enough my two favorite women left to visit with Monica and her husband for a little while. 
 
The reason for the party was the imminent arrival of Warwick, another Nauruan, who had just been on a trip to Bangkok, Thailand.  Everybody was waiting for his plane to land and when he finally showed up, he was accompanied by Lucas.  You guessed it, he is from Nauru as well and by the way he was treated by the others, I gather that he holds a position of considerable importance somewhere. 
 
I was quite touched that my friends had made Poisson Cry especially for me.  This is raw fish Polynesian-style, marinated in coconut cream, finely chopped onions and a few assorted spices.  In this case it was made from Wahoo and it was delicious.  For some strange reason I prefer fish raw (it must be absolutely fresh, though) to fish cooked, broiled, steamed, fried, deep-fried, barbecued or whatever.  By a factor of about one hundred.  Or more.  The exception is the local squid, caught inside the lagoon, which tastes really wonderful barbecued.  Naturally Liping & Johnny were soon deep into a discussion about the fine art of cooking, each giving the other numerous tips and ideas. 
 
When the evening was nearing its end and Jeff, Johnny, Anton and I had retired to Johnny's porch once more, they suddenly told me that they were very glad that they had got to know me.  They thoroughly approved that I had brought my family along and claimed that they had never met another sailor quite like me.  They called me "genuine" and paid me a lot of other compliments and when I protested that I wasn't that special at all, they cut me short and said that they chose their friends with great care, finally telling me:  "You are one of us!"
 
I was quite moved by this obviously heartfelt declaration.  Especially so, as I had received an eMail just a few days earlier, where somebody had read my blog and didn't like what he found there.  I gather that he really thinks of me as an arrogant impostor, who compounds his sins by being "filthy rich".  Apart from that, there is another reason why I was so touched. 
 
Ever since I moved to Taiwan in 1982, I really wanted to fit in and integrate completely.  But over the years I realized that this cultural gap is just too big to overcome.  People only assume that they have finally made it.  It can't really be done, unless you actually grow up within the two different cultures (at least cultures as different as those in Taiwan and Germany).  So I am very glad indeed that my friends from Nauru and the Marshall Islands at least notice that I am trying. 
 
Back home Liping & I talked way past midnight again.  We were very tired, but it was simply too interesting, so we just couldn't make ourselves go to bed earlier.  It is almost every day like that, too.  :-)