C A R I N T H I A
Welcome to S/V Carinthia's Sailblog :
 
Leaving Tonga
Dietmar Petutschnig
10/30/2009, Tonga - Nufu'aloka

The voyage to New Zealand - land of the long white cloud - is upon us. Carinthia is ready - we're fueled up - the fresh water tanks are full and the weather reports are favorable. So it is with great trepidation that we are leaving Tonga - what a unique and wonderful kingdom.

We celebrated big momma's 7th anniversary with a big party and a great group picture of all the yachts in attendance.

Our buddy boat Wayward Wind;s crew Pat unfortunately had a bad accident and broke her leg. She and her girlfriend Patty will be on tonight's flight to Auckland to be operated on in New Zealand.

One last night of rest at anchor and then off - 1,000 n.m. via MInerva Reef. This will be our most treacherous passage due to sometimes harsh weather conditions - we have assistance from a professional weather router though - so we hope to be in good hands and in New Zealand within 2 weeks or less.

Daily updates for those of you who care - via our new yahoo group SVCARINTHIA.

JOURNEY
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Milestones
Dietmar Petutschnig
10/25/2009, South Pacific - Tonga - Big Momma's

Milestones...

Over 10,000 nm and 1 year at sea. Tallied it up and can't believe it myself.

Ever since joining the Baja-Haha Rally in 2008 we have been going and going and going.

We first crossed the border into Mexico last year and other boat names on VHF sounded foreign and unfamiliar.

On this first anniversary - pulling in to harbor - reveals a family of fellow aquatic nomadic tribesmen -

hardened by the miles and encounters on the oceans and how many of them we now know.

My heart is filled with joy - and while we are all still the same individuals - all perspectives have changed.

Priorities and what's important have re-aligned themselves just as the new economic realities for landlubbers now translate the word of "luxury" into superfluous .

So,if all is changing everywhere - then crossing the pacific from east to west and north to south is helping mature my outlook on this wonderful world.

There are no physical milestones in the ocean - and to conjure up one may be an exercise in futility.

We have sailed passed many islands - encountered microscopic bio-luminescence life forms - giant whales and mantas - sharks and dolphins - super and mega yachts and sunken vessels. We have lost fellow sailors - we sat across a table with one day - to find them gone the next - a somber reminder of just how fragile life can be.

At one point the chart plotter displayed a depth of 17,000 feet a few hours later the turquoise shelter of an atoll showcases coral and sand in 10 feet.

So there it is - an assembly of thoughts and wonder - pictures to proof it all - we now have a tough leg ahead - sailing to New Zealand next week via the infamous Minerva reef - the flotilla of yachts assembled here in Tonga nervously discuss the weather windows - for some have gotten whacked in the past - and perhaps next year - many more nautical miles down the horizon - I will look back at this anniversary knowing once again - how much I still have to absorb and what a joy it is to navigate under the stars, which drop from the pure offshore night sky like the black pearls collected from the seven atolls visited - around my neck.

Let's plot a course - raise the main - let's journey on !

JOURNEY
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A perfect anchorage !
Dietmar Petutschnig
10/19/2009, HA'ANO Tonga

What is a perfect anchorage ?

I'm going to attempt to describe this briefly.

For starters you get to this spot around 3 PM under a perfect blue sky. The wind - as you approach - is on the nose and under 15 knots so you can drop the mainsail in seconds. There are only 4 boats in a sheltered bay big enough for 20 yachts. The water is crystal clear and you drop in 30 feet where you can see the sandy bottom. The temperature is 80 degrees and you already know 2 of the other 4 boats. The trip to the beach in the dinghy takes 2 minutes. The beach is devoid of mammals so your dog can play to her heart's content - expect for 2 horses next to a thatched cabin where a local waves at you and your shore party. The beach is long and pristine without washed ashore plastic trash from "advanced" civilizations 4,000 n.m.. away. The kayaking is beyond belief in this sheltered cove without ripples. The water is not too hot or not too cold. The sun is warm not hot. The following 8 yachts anchor without causing you to be alarmed. The palm trees sway. The music of the moment is perfect and the new amplifier and speakers causes the fish to smile. On the horizon is a small little green island with a huge volcano further away adding to the dramatic sunset skyline build up. The burgees and flags are from more than 8 countries - in this case from 4 continents. VHF 16 is relatively calm. Whoever is wearing skin tight bathing suits - looks good in it. There is no charter boat amongst the lot. There is no power boat amongst the lot. There are no jet skies. There is no-one selling anything. There is a surf spot 2 n.m. away with a perfect left. The freezer produced enough ice in the last 24 hours to chill a perfect martini. You can run your water maker. You can run your gen set. Everyone has their anchor light on. Your hull is clean. There is no WIFI - but the sat phone works. Someone caught too much fish and shares it with you. Your grill is clean and you have plenty of gas to grill said fish. You have fresh vegetables provisioned from the local market at the last anchorage. You smile - it's not rolling - you're on a catamaran. Now that the anchorage is filling up latecomer's are moving to the next bay and are not squeezing in.

to be continued ...

JOURNEY
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