About Us

Welcome to our blog, describing our voyage aboard the two BRAVO's; the first boat a Kelly Peterson 46 with homeport in Seattle, Washington. The second is a Boreal 52, launched in Treguier, France in February 2020.

We headed south from Seattle in 2010, and have been voyaging in one form or another since. Cheers, Adam and Cindi


"As for me, I am tormented by an everlasting itch for things remote. I love to sail forbidden seas, and land on barbarous coasts." -Herman Melville, 1844



Thursday, August 24, 2017

Epi.....epic

Tasty wahoo leapt into our freezer.
Leaving Efate in our wake, we continued north on the SE tradewinds to Lamen Bay on Epi, after brief overnight stops at Nguna and Emae islands.

Lamen is known for a few things, among them resident dugongs and friendly people.  It delivered the goods on both accounts, and then some!


















Arriving ashore in Lamen Bay we were met by Bennington, famous for growing (and selling) hard-to-find vegetables and herbs to visiting yachties, in addition to the usual papaya, bananas, pamplemouse, and root veggies.  Over the next week or so, we became great friends with "Bennie" and her husband, Kenneth, one of the chiefs of the island.  They showed us around the island, taught us heaps about the local culture, and took us under their wings for the Vanuatu Independence Day (week) celebrations.


Hanging out with Bennie and Kenneth in front of their new tourist bungalow








Cindi gathering some basil......pesto pasta with fresh wahoo......ahhhhhh.......






Kenneth shows how the thatched roofs are made.....done right, they'll last at least 10 years.....


Interior shot of the new bungalow venture.....we wish them well!!!

We happened to be in Lamen Bay for the Independence Day holiday, marking 37 years of independence from the joint British/French rule.  The "day" was actually a full week celebration across the bay on Lamen Island......we made the trip across on several days, enjoying the party and both the whacky and serious competitions in round robin soccer (football) and volleyball.  All good!!!

Folks came by boat each day, either powered or canoe.....we took the power boat.








Basket weaving competition.....These women were amazing!!!



















The round-the-island bike race was our favorite.  The 3 competitors in the peloton (there were only 3 allowed, since there are only 3 bikes on the island!) all had to run to one end of the island, where the bikes were waiting.  They would get their pick of the bikes, and then race back to the finish line.  The finish was pretty casual, w/ one guy skidding to a stop to parade around in front of his mates, before they told him to get back on the bike and finish the race!!!  Gotta love it!







Competitions for the kids included penmanship and drawing the Vanuatu flag.








Start of the round the island running race

The kava drinking competition only had 1 competitor.....no one challenged this guy!

All in all, a great week spent with the good people of Lamen Bay and Island.....young and old, everybody enjoys a good celebration!








Rovo Bay Market

One day we hiked up the road for a couple of hours with Bennie and Kenneth to the next village on market day.  It was a great walk, and we learned a lot about the local history.  Especially poignant on the Vanuatu independence day......It seems that before independence in 1980, much of the island was a French owned copra (dried coconut) plantation.  The local people were badly discriminated against and the employees harshly treated.  We toured the old plantation buildings, now being reclaimed by the jungle, including a hollowed out banyan tree used as the prison.  The story goes that at one point, just before independence, French overseers were drinking wine, and mixed up a barrel of wine laced with poison for the villagers.  Over 50 were killed.  Several of these stories painted a harsh picture of life as an occupied nation.  A very sad era indeed.







Copra drying, nearly ready for export


Lamen Bay, with Lamen island in the background on the left

The market is held every 2 weeks, on the government employee payday, and was good fun, with lots of folks hanging out most of the day with friends from other villages, schmoozing, buying, and selling....we spent a good couple of hours before taking a truck back to Lamen Bay with our purchases.  Ahhhhh....."island time".....gotta love it.















We love these biodegradable shopping bags!  Takes just a minute to weave one up.





We've long carried a set of bocce balls around on the boat.  A lot of fun to bring ashore and get the locals involved in a game.  You never know if they'll get into it or not, usually its a hit!  We brought them into the beach at Lamen Bay, and the villagers were definitely into it!!!  Unbeknownst to us, several of the young men play for money when they go to Port Vila for work, and these guys were amazing players, putting heaps of back and side English on the balls.....We all wanted one of those ringers on our teams!!!  A fun afternoon!!!







DUGONG-HO !!!

Many of the islands and bays in Vanuatu are home to resident dugongs, large sea mammals similar to manatees, and closely related to the Hoover vacuum cleaner.  We've been to several places known for their dugongs, but kept getting skunked out of a sighting......"You should have been here yesterday...." was the mantra we heard over and over.

Finally, one day in Lamen Bay, the cry of "Dugong-Ho" was heard from a boat anchored nearby.  The rascal was swimming all around the anchorage area, feasting on the grass growing on the bottom.  We jumped into the dinghy with our snorkel gear, and weren't disappointed!!!  Sorry about the bubbles on the lens, but you get the idea!!!











And a couple of videos, hope they load.....uploading video with the bandwidth in Vanuatu is like trying to push a school bus through a soda straw......





Well, that wraps up our Epic stay on Epi.....next up, we'll head over to the Maskelyne Islands and Malekula, home of the Big Namba and Small Namba people (google "namba", for a preview!!!)




Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Port Vila, Vanuatu's "Big Papaya"

Since the last post, it's been a great month of continued exploration of both the cities and remote villages of this wonderful country.

Port Vila

After enjoying the warmth and welcome of the villagers on the more remote islands, we headed into the "big city", Port Vila on Efate Island, unsure of what to expect.  Though perhaps not as big as most national capital cities, Vila, with her population of 44,000, is the economic and political center of the country.  For many Nivan people, a move to Vila represents the best (or only) way to earn any cash, as life in the island villages is typically subsistence and barter based.  As a result, it was uncommon to meet any folks actually from Vila, or even it's island, Efate.

We were happy to get a mooring at Yachting World, the hub of cruising info and services in the area.  While the owner was a cranky old thing, longtime lead staffers Moses and Lemara could not have been more accommodating, making us feel right at home in the nation's "Big Papaya".

We spent a bit over a week in Port Vila, taking care of business, accessing internet for the first time in a while, eating in restaurants, fueling and provisioning, diving and generally playing tourist.  Adam also got his Vanuatu ham radio callsign, YJ0ST to play geek in the coming weeks.  All in all, not a bad interlude.  We sort of liked the place, though in our outlook, the simpler life on the outer islands has much more appeal.  Here's a quick look at Efate Island.......

Together with Rich and Cindy from s/v Legacy, we hired a taxi for a day to tour the island.  Efate has one main road running around the perimeter of the island, so sightseeing was fairly straightforward.


The "Blue Lagoon", a great swimming hole






Classic Ni-van string band.  These guys were great!!!


Typical relic of WWII rotting in Havannah Harbor, named for the cigars the American GI's smoked while stationed here.



Rust in Peace!!!

We did get to enjoy kava, the Pacific elixir, at a local "nakamal", or kava bar.  The kava in Vanuatu is known by connoisseurs as the strongest to be found anywhere, and we couldn't argue.  Just a couple of bowls put us into our happy place.  Here, Cindi at the trough, where it seems customary to hawk and spit both before and after slurping down a bowl!!!

Bottoms up!!!


We enjoyed a fun day of diving at Moso Island with Tranquility Diving and turtle sanctuary.  Lots of hawksbill turtles both pre and after release,  nice to see folks looking after the little rascals.








The Legacy crew ready to get wet











Cindi may be exaggerating a bit about the size of the turtle she just saw!!!


Whoever invented triggerfish???   "I'll have whatever he's having" !!!

Orangestriped triggerfish




Blackbelly Picasso triggerfish






We enjoyed our brief stay in Port Vila, but were anxious to get back out to the more remote islands, the heart and soul of Vanuatu.....next up, Epi Island for Vanuatu Independence Day.....