SailBlogs
Bookmark and Share
SV Secret Agent Man
Eric Rone
07/09/2012


06/30/2012

Hello all,
It is Sunday morning in Fiji. Amy is cooking breakfast and i am thinking about how much I am going to miss her when she is gone on her visit home. She is catching the ferry for suva tonight and it will be the first time we have been apart since April. Yesterday was dinghy sailing. I again had a blast. I brought my own boat and was able to do some on the water coaching as the RC boat has to stay put to run races. In the morning I took the lasers by myself which was really fun. We practiced sailing without our rudders as it was light air. They got a kick out of watching me do it and got the hang of it right away. Peter (in green sleeved rashguard) was the best. I put them through all the drills that I grew up with in Tacoma and they were really keen to get the attention and different style of coaching. Two reporters from the Fiji times were there doing a story on the program and Tim and I got interviewed as the guest instructors.
There is a weather window on tuesday to get south and I am really going to miss Savu Savu and coaching sailing on Saturday.

07/02/2012 | gretchen
want to sail Yale Lake this weekend? We'll let you sleep-rap and everything! (I'm serious... looking for a third....)
06/30/2012


06/30/2012


06/30/2012

Finn (in Opti) and Sam have sailed all the way here from the UK with their dingheys on the deck of their yacht. They go out sailing almost every day by themselves and it is very nice for the Fijians to get two extra boats in their fleet on Saturday.

06/30/2012


06/30/2012 | Eric Rone
towing in for lunch
06/30/2012


06/25/2012

Savu Savu harbour.

06/28/2012 | Eric's Dad
Fantastic report and great photo's. Are you sure that pix in the wool hats wasn't a summer in the Pacific Northwest? You are both amazingly adventurous and great ambassadors. All your blog fans can say is (to quote your niece Ingrid) more more!
06/25/2012

Secret Agent Man sailing out of the harbour on a mission out to the reef for snorkeling and to check out "Cousteux's Resort". This is only the second picture of my boat under sail from the whole trip. It is very rare to get one and I must credit my friend Bill on "Solstice" for the photo.

06/29/2012 | Ryan
Sweet!

Hey man, lost your sailmail address. Autumn and I bought a boat - hope for a rendesvous with you somewhere in the South Pacific in the next few years!

Brad and I are doing Vic Maui which starts July 7th. Check our blog out if you get wifi... http://svdoubletake.wordpress.com/
06/25/2012

Jammin with friends at the "Copra Shed", a local cruiser's hang out. We ended up getting two more musicians on guitar, and our local Fijian friend "Apeli" ripping on the Uke.

06/25/2012

Radio time at sea. Here, I am having breakfast as I listen to the weather and prepare to check in on the "Rag of the Air" SSB net in the morning. I must admit that my radio scheds are my favorite times of the day. When I am single handing it is so nice to talk to people every day. And participating in the Pacific Seafairer's Net is a major reason for a yachtie to get their ham radio licence before you leave. I have friends who I have never seen but could recognize their voice in a heartbeat. (Calling home with a radio phone patch is a huge perk too. Thanks WA6TLL, Tom in Riverside CA)

Fiji
Eric
06/23/2012, Savusavu

Hello All,
We are in Fiji. Thank you all for your patience. Internet is a luxury that we dont always have. It took us 12 days to get here from NZ including a stop over at Minerva reef. Amy was a champ. She had some drama getting her sea legs but nothing major. I was happy to take care of her and she came around at Minerva. We had epic sailing. It was quite fresh for a few of those days, but from the right direction. We caught lots of fish, mostly Mahi Mahi unless some of our escapees were different species. We made land fall at dawn on a Tuesday at Savusavu. Amy was on watch before our approach and kept the throttle down a little too hard. I came on at 300 and had a few hours to kill before daylight so I hit the breaks. The landfall was magic. The people are great. We have been hanging out with cruisers that I have met before in the Pacific, and have made many new friends. Amy and I are net controllers for the cruisers net on Friday and Saturday. I have a lot of experience on the radio and it is very fun to see her learn the ropes and do her own radio show in the morning. I have been coaching sailing at the local club. (lasers and optis). We were out yesterday in 15-20kts and had action. A laser with a Fijian named "pete" driving was dismasted at the deck... and later, I got in a laser myself and gave their champ a run for his money. I gave a chalk talk afterward (as the guest instructor from America) It was extra special for the kids because I was able to point out my boat in the anchorage tell them my story, and light up their eyes. I hope we are still around next week for the racing. Amy and I have been playing our guitars a lot, and have indeed rocked a party. We even played a show at a local restaurant. It was just her and me. The band took a break, she played guitar and sang and I just sang. We put on a clinic of how to rock a party and brought the house down. The Fijians appreciated the change of pace. As of lately, we are waiting for a weather window to get east to the Lau Group. It is, and has been, steady and reinforced trade winds for the past two weeks. We need to sail east so we are staying put, refusing to give up the Lau, but are enjoying immersing ourselves in Savusavu in the meantime. All n' all, things are well and fine aboard and I miss you all and hope you are all well and happy.
Eric

06/24/2012 | Naomi
Hey Eric and Amy...so cool that you're enjoying Fiji. We're finally in Alaska, and loving getting our land legs back. Wonderful to see huge mountain peaks again. Awesome that you're rocking the dice and the sushi! N&J
06/25/2012 | Heather
This just might be my favorite update so far; it's so fun to hear how happy you are and read about your involvement in the communities you visit. Thanks for rocking my Monday. Love you both, HMR
06/22/2012

After... Savusavu, Fiji, also known as hidden paradise. Time to shed those layers!

06/22/2012

Before... a much colder happy pair sail out of New Zealand... headed north for the winter

Minerva Reef
Eric / Eric's Dad
06/05/2012, South Pacifc

Eric & Amy have arrived at Minerva Reef on the morning of their seventh day out from New Zealand. It was fast sailing and the warming temperatures announce their approach into the tropics. Here are two e-mails from therm this past few days.


June 4
Hey guys,
As I write this we are ripping along on a beam reach with a single reef in the main and full genoa. The breeze is out of the east at about 15 knots and there are lots of squalls. It makes a big difference if they go behind or ahead of us. We are motor with no wind if they pass ahead, and we get a lifting 20-25 knot puff if we make it in front of them. It is fun. We have had two fish on but they got away. Amy has her sea legs but it took a while. She says Hi Laura. We should get into Minerva reef tomorrow. A trough from Vanuatu to the SE is making NE 15-20kts here starting tomorrow and Wed so we are going to sit that out. And yes dad we have been smashing! Our slowest 24 hour out of the four has been 136Miles and we did 149 on the first one. The clean bottom is fast! It is getting warmer every day we are in shorts and T-shirts.
Love
Eric and Amy

June 6
Hey guys,
We are safely on the hook at Minerva reef. We cleaned the boat up yesterday, took baths, went on a shore patrol, and made sushi with our Mahi Mahi. The air is feeling tropical finally. The water is OK, but we will need to wear our wet
suits for spear-fishing. Yesterday we walked on the reef. The windward edge is cool, but the lagoon side is magic. There is a constant flow of water into the lagoon from the ocean coming over the reef, and at low tide there is a seemingly endless waterfall of ocean water pouring into the lagoon. Great snorkeling and lots of marine life on that side. We saw lots of fish. Tree decent sized white
tips, and I saw a big sting ray under the boat when I was diving the anchor. We are going to be here for a few days waiting on a nice weather window to make it up to Fiji.

PS (DAD) This is a perfect spot to practice celestial navigation. The reef is awash at high tide so it is like sitting at anchor in the middle of the ocean with a 360 degree horizon. Amy is keen to learn.

Eric

Note from Eric
Eric's Dad / Eric
06/02/2012, South Pacific

Here's a note from Eric via his Ham radio e-mail received Friday. Per last nights position report through the Pac Sea Roll Call, they are bombing along in 20 knots taking big daily leaps toward the lower latitudes and the warmth of the tropics. Here's his note ...

Hello all,
We are sailing east of north towards Fiji still with a possible stop at Minerva
reef. We had two really good 24 hour runs so far: 136 miles yesterday, and 149
the day before which is really good for Secret Agent Man. Amy is slowly getting
her sea legs. We played dice in the cockpit last night ripping along in 25 kts
of wind. The breeze started off out of the South and has swung East. It has been
fresh the whole time but nothing over 30 kts, and we have had some light spots
after squalls. We had one fish on but it got away. We have 790 miles to go to
Fiji and about half that to Minerva. This morning we took off out jackets and
socks. (Amy put hers back on) We just got into the 20s having crossed 30 Degrees
South. We cant wait for the teens.
Eric

For those who want to follow Eric daily there's a couple of ways. Every evening he posts his once per day position and conditions report with the Pac Sea Net "Roll Call" Here they are listed by their call sign KF7 DCY along with a dozen or more other sailors on various legs of their own voyages. The Roll call website is....

http://www.pangolin.co.nz/yotreps/pacseanet.php

On that site the data is labelled in a cryptic way, here's last night's report...

16|KF7DCY |0300|29 20 S 179 11 E|030|6.4| SE| 20| SE|2.0| 40|1029|0 |

This means they were the 16th boat on the list. Followed by the time reporting in Universal Standard Time (Previously known as Greenwich Mean Time). Their latitude and longitude, their compass course (030 degree's magnetic), the boats current speed, the winds direction and strength in knots, the swell direction and height in meters, the percentage of cloud cover and finally the barometer and trend.

If you want to see them on a zoomable map of the South Pacific then here's the site

http://www.pangolin.co.nz/yotreps/tracker.php?ident=KF7DCY

You'll notice both the current leg (blue markers) as well as markers from the past legs on this trip.

06/02/2012 | Laura Cella/Amy's Mom
Thank you for forwarding Eric's post. I really appreciate any and all info on their voyage. (Also was amazed at how you could decipher last night's report. Now I KNOW that Eric comes from a line a well seasoned sailors!!) I'm glad to hear that Amy seems to be doing fine. What an adventure!!
Back at Sea
Eric's Dad
05/31/2012, South Pacific

Secret Agent Man is a happy boat having left the Bay of Islands bound for Savusavu Bay in Fiji on May 29th. Eric e-mails that after 149 miles in 24 hours it is "Sweet sailing". Fiji is about 1200 miles away and this passage may (or may not) involve a stop at Minerva Reef depending on the weather. Being away from the Internet he has deputized me again to write a few reports.

6 months in New Zealand was a long stopover filled with a wealth of exploration, repair and refit, and visiting and being visited by family. Since last November's landfall at Cape Brett and the subsequent sail down to Auckland an enormous amount of work has gone into the boat. Eric comments that S.A.M. is more sorted out at this point than ever before. The loyal readers have met Midshipman Amy in the recent posts and Eric has convinced her to join him for the return to the tropics. Her intellect, organization and skill sets are sizeable and a compliment to the ships manifest. The Man Cave may never be the same!

Getting cold in NZ with the last week of southerly winds driving down the morning lows into the 40-degree range. Eric commented that they are wearing virtually every piece of clothing they have under their foul weather gear and watching the latitude numbers slowly fall (that's good) on the GPS as they sail north to the warmer waters and longer days. The Kiwi's were wonderfully hospitable and accommodating. Thank you to all who helped these young sailors far from home.

Newer ]  |  [ Older ]

 

 
 
 
SailBlogs Friends
Trim Outbound 
 

 
Powered by SailBlogs