Cruising on Destiny

02 January 2014 | Bantry Bay
31 December 2013 | Careening Cove, Sydney
18 December 2012 | Sydney
18 September 2012 | Coffs Harbour
14 September 2012 | Rivergate Marina, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
12 September 2012 | Coral Sea
10 September 2012 | Coral Sea
31 August 2012 | Noumea
26 August 2012
22 August 2012 | Port Moselle
19 August 2012 | Port Moselle
17 August 2012 | West Coast, New Caledonia
12 August 2012 | Anse Vata
10 August 2012 | Port Moselle, Noumea, NC
10 August 2012 | Port Moselle
30 July 2012 | The seawall, Vila Harbour
25 July 2012 | Back in Port Vila
17 July 2012 | Port Vila
08 July 2012 | Ashore with Sea Fever
24 June 2012

Tam Tams

18 July 2010 | Ranvetlam Bay
John and Shauna
Yesterday was Sunday and so the villages had a slow start, then Church. Ranon and Ranvetlam are Presbyterian villages, since the Scots were the first Europeans in the area - the church is simple and sparsely decorated, in contrast to the more ornate and prominently-placed Catholic church we passed along the coast at Olol. The village of Ranon is nice - neat and spacious and very welcoming. About 50 or so families we estimated, living in simple timber and banana-leaf thatch huts on woven mat floors or in a couple of cases on concrete slabs. There is a small store operated as co-operative by the villagers, supplying basic canned goods, flour, rice and simple clothing items, as well as providing a perfect venue for the Ni-Van habit and art of standing around chatting and laughing for hours on end. We met Reuben, a local woodcarver who makes tamtams (traditional drum-like instruments carved from huge straight hardwood logs hollowed out and decorated with human-like stylised faces a bit like tikis, and used to communicate within and between villages to call people to chiefs' meetings, to declare and end war, and other such things). Reuben is renowned and proudly showed us a very large tamtam ths height of two men that he is making for a private buyer in France. Reuben was in the Vanuatu army and spent some time in New Zealand, but returned to his village and traditional life and Kastom ways. Family and village are very strong ties for these people. The villagers like and feel warmly about Australia, but particularly to New Zealand - the Kiwis have been far more forthcoming and accommodating with their schme to allow Ni-Van men in to do seasonal fruit-picking and return here with much-needed cash and strong bonds of friendship. The locals can't understand why the Australian authorities and trade unions find it so hard to get such as scheme (often talked about) up and running in a substantial way. We agree with them here. We're here for at least another night, and we'll keep you posted.
Click here for pics. Best wishes to all.
Comments
Vessel Name: Destiny V
Vessel Make/Model: 45' round chine steel cruising cutter - a Joe Adams design and a very sea-kindly crew-friendly vessel
Hailing Port: Sydney, Australia
Crew: John and Shauna
About:
People ask us: "Are you semi-retired?". Well no, we're semi-working. We love cruising, but the problem is we also quite like what we do in our civilian lives. So, for the last few years, we have been cruising over the southern Winter and Spring. [...]
Extra:
Our last severalyears of cruising have been spent exploring New Caledonia and the beautiful islands of Vanuatu, an entrancing country with wonderful, uncomplicated, happy and generous people. This winter we are at home doing some upgrades - navigation, rigid cockpit cover, watermaker and sundry [...]

Destiny's Crew

Who: John and Shauna
Port: Sydney, Australia
Sunshine on blue water, twelve knots on the beam.... The trades are blowing gently and we're sailing like a dream..... Sipping from the cup of life and getting mostly cream....
"Believe me, my young friend, there is nothing - absolutely nothing - half so much worth doing as simply messing about in boats" - Ratty to Mole in "Wind in the Willows"