Giselle is not the first sailing ship to arrive here, there are reports of a certain Captain Cook sailing in in 1774 and named the bay after his ship, Resolution. Still today Port Resolution offers good anchorage for yachts. Tanna is Vanuatu’s second most popular island to visit, main reason, it has an active volcano
Entries Tagged as 'Pacific Leg'
New Hebrides but with no hint of Scotland
June 18th, 2011 · 3 Comments
Tags: Friends & Family · Pacific Leg
At anchor: Lamen Bay, Epi, Vanuatu
May 21st, 2011 · 1 Comment
We have accelerated trade winds at the moment as there is a large high to the the south. The passage here from Mele just north of Port Villa was in 30-35 knots of wind just aft of the beam, so a quick passage. An awkward sea was running rather like the sea between the islands […]
Tags: At Sea · Pacific Leg
At anchor: Port Vila, Efate, Vanuatu
May 16th, 2011 · Comments Off on At anchor: Port Vila, Efate, Vanuatu
Visually it was like coming into Oban on a wet day when we entered the Port Vila bay yesterday. Temperatures a bit different with both Sea and air at 28°C. The Convective belt of clouds called the South Pacific Convergence zone has been close for the last few days giving overcast skies and rain. I’m […]
Tags: At Sea · Pacific Leg
At anchor: Port Resolution, Tanna, Vanuatu
May 12th, 2011 · 1 Comment
Arrived at 14:10 local time. Excellent sail for the last 2 days. Captain Cook named the harbour after his ship when he anchored here. The locals eat the first European missionaries and ones sent from Fiji but are really friendly now. Impressive local school for 250 children and the village has about 250 people. We […]
Tags: At Sea · Pacific Leg
At Sea: Port Resolution tonight
May 11th, 2011 · Comments Off on At Sea: Port Resolution tonight
We made the 6.3 knot average with ease despite some current against us, so should be tucked up in Port Resolution for the night. Several fishing boats were close to our path in the night. Seemed smaller than many ocean fishing boats and with bright lights perhaps to attract the fish. They appeared stationary and […]
Tags: At Sea · Pacific Leg
At Sea: Dawn Princess at Noon
May 9th, 2011 · 3 Comments
Got through to the trade winds at 12:00 yesterday. Great run every since. We averaged 7.5 knots for the first 4 hours and 7.0 for the whole day. If we can make 6.3 overall average we get into Port Resolution on Wednesday before dark otherwise we’ll have another night at sea. Forecast is for the […]
Tags: At Sea · Pacific Leg
At sea: 8 Knots in Squalls
May 9th, 2011 · Comments Off on At sea: 8 Knots in Squalls
Mixture of motoring and sailing. All sails up in squalls to sail, all sails down to stop flogging in lulls. Squalls were lasting 2 hours now a good bit longer – perhaps we have found the permanent wind. Got out the big reacher yesterday to try and sail in 10 knots of wind but the […]
Tags: At Sea · Pacific Leg
At sea: Avoiding Matthew and Hunter
May 8th, 2011 · 1 Comment
We have the fans on in the cabin today. Nearly all blue sky so hot on deck. All the sails down and motoring as the 4m swell from the SW was just flapping the reefed main we usually leave up when motoring. I wonder if we saw our last Albatross yesterday. Today there is no […]
Tags: At Sea · Pacific Leg
At Sea: To windward we go, we go
May 6th, 2011 · Comments Off on At Sea: To windward we go, we go
North of 30 now traditionally the end of the westerly airflow and start of the trades – not today! Typically though the depressions don’t bring gale force winds this far north. Gusts last night 20 to 25 so easily handled by the 2 reefs. Past the one third milestone. Discovered how to stop the mess […]
Tags: At Sea · Pacific Leg
At Sea: Good News – Wind, Bad News – on the nose
May 6th, 2011 · Comments Off on At Sea: Good News – Wind, Bad News – on the nose
Sailing now since mid day Thursday. Initially a romp with the wind from the east then hard on the wind as it went slowly through the north and upto 25-30 knots for a while. Sea is confused with several 2m swells present but Giselle is getting through it with ease – long may that last. […]
Tags: At Sea · Pacific Leg