Category: Passages

  • Almost time to go…

    Well hello! Happy belated new year to everybody. The days have quickly ticked by since our arrival back to New Zealand and in the midst of it all I have failed to post this year! In preparation for our trip across the Tasman my significant other has been up to his elbows in boat projects for two days straight. Most cruising wives/girlfriends can back me up in that more often than not, the best way to help out on days such as these is to just stay out of the way. So here I sit on the couch, legs tucked underneath me, trying to leave as much room as possible for my boat monkey to get his work done. We’ve been given the go ahead by Bob McDavitt, a weather guru god if you will to the sailing community, to set sail for Australia this week. We wait now on our alternator to be returned to us and then there’s nothing else I can think of that would delay the inevitable any longer. It’s passage time, once again.

    Thus come mid afternoon tomorrow the galley will be ablaze with sauces, casseroles, boiling chicken breasts, chopped this, and chopped that. I’ve said it before, I’ll say it again. Knocking out any, or possibly all, cooking that would otherwise have to be done at sea is a hands down must for yours truly. If you’ve followed us along our journey through any previous passages then you are probably fully aware of my ridiculous fear of gimbal stoves. At anchor, I’ll cook all day but when there is motion in the ocean, I’d rather eat cardboard.
    The Force 10 3 Burner Stove top.  You may notice one small support bar missing on the small left burner.  I fell over into it and broke it off on a recent passage but I have it sitting right here to be welded back on so it's not lost or anything. Another shot of the galley
    After more than a year of this incredible lifestyle, the stove and I (at sea) I have thus far failed to establish a good relationship and its in sensitiveness has made more cry on way more than one occasion. You label me any name in the book you want to…punanny, pansy, or even worse a different p word…I could care less. There are many women far braver than I who tackle their own gimbal stove with no fear whatsoever but I, unfortunately, have been unable to do so. It’s a fear I hope to conquer…one day.

    Speaking of conquering fears, last night I layed awake for a solid hour. My armpits were sweating. I was nervous. Drew was dead to the world. There was no one trying to come aboard Dosia and inflict bodily harm on me. I was merely thinking about the bungee jumps that are waiting to taunt me when we arrive back in New Zealand to travel the South Island. Will I find the gonads to jump? Just how pissed will I be at myself if I return back to the States having not taken the plunge(s)? My dad writes me the other day…”Marge, do me a favor. If you’re going to jump off of anything or out of anything, please wait until after you do so to tell your mother.” Thus he enforces the fact that its all dangerous. I don’t crave the danger. I really don’t. It didn’t thrill me to stand on the edge of that Sky Tower in Auckland and look down over my toes at a distance so great it looked like the building beneath me was inverted. All the while a giant bulls eye was there to guide me “home.” It reminded me later of the skit Ron White did that time where the guy asks him how far the single engine plane they were riding in was going to take them and he replied, “all the way to the scene of the crash.” I cried like a little girl. The fear that consumed me was so intense. Mascara was streaming down my face so bad the guy had to delay my jump so I could wipe it off just to be able to watch as I plunged to the earth. However, as soon as I went, as soon as I was falling, I loved every second of it. I know that I would love sky diving over the incredible Nelson Lakes or bungee jumping in Queenstown. I will hope every night for the courage to take the plunge when the time comes…

    Until then I’ll continue to partake in wonderful events that aren’t so life threatening like our buddy, Tom’s from s/v Zen, birthday the other day. Being the dessert lover that he is, I whipped up a cake for him and his lovely wife, Monique, took a small group of us out to lunch to celebrate in Paihia. The day was full of good food, great laughs, awesome music, and incredible company. I am going to miss these people that I’ve formed these bonds with out here so much when this is all said and done. There isn’t a single wave that would have been the same without them, or Drew, by my side.
    Monique-s/v Zen, Marge, & Rina-s/v Follow You, Follow Me The b-day boy with the cake Marge made him

  • Back to NZ – The Plan

    After a short month in the states visiting friends and family we returned to Auckland on New Years Eve morning.  Due to some previous planning, we knew to expect our friends Geoff and Julie from s/v Flashback in the same hotel as us overlooking the Viaduct Harbor (actually our hotel overlooked the Viaduct but our budget rooms had more of a city/parking garage view).  We haven’t seen them in over three months, which, in the scheme of things, isn’t all that long.  But regardless, the champagne came out and the festivities quickly began.  About two hours before the countdown (almost one full day before you guys on the East Coast of the U.S. were even thinking about it) we headed down to the harbor to join up with a bunch of other cruising friends on board Wayward Wind. As the clock struck twelve we hugged those aboard, many of whom have been a substantial part of the memories we created in this past year living aboard Dosia and having these islands of the South Pacific be our home away from home.

    "family reunion" on s/v Karma view of downtown Auckland off the back of Karma Drew and Marge-Waiheke Island

    We spent the first days of this new year with Geoff & Jules packing in as much as possible. Two very quick day trips-one to Bayswater Marina just on the other side of the harbor from downtown Auckland to see our dear friends Richard & Krista of m/v Karma &  then one to Waiheke Island and its beutiful wine vineyards to see our buddies Tane & Tomas of s/v Kena. We could have spent many, many days seeing vineyard after vineyard but alas, Dosia was waiting for us in Whangarei, we were anxious to see how she held up by herself for the past month and a half, and because of one very important reason there was work to be done…

    While it is bittersweet for both of us, we are getting Dosia ready for our last big trip aboard. We have a good feeling it will not be her last.  As you already know, Dosia went up for sale before we left Vava’u, Tonga back in October.  Well, she actually went under contract only a few weeks after we began advertising her. The new owners, Trevor and Ali Curtis, a young couple from Gold Coast, Australia are anxiously awaiting delivery.

    Trevor & Ali Curtis-Dosia's new owners Drew & Trevor taking Dosia out for a test sail in Opua, NZ Ali at the helm

    We agreed to take care of a few routine maintenance issues (like new bottom paint and batteries) here in New Zeland before delivery.  So for the last week, we’ve done just that.  Dosia hauls out tomorrow morning for a fresh bottom painting, few days to dry, and then we’re looking for the weather window that will carry us acorss the Tasman Sea to Brisbane.  From there, we’re not quite sure of the plan.  We have no reservations or tickets for anything and it’s the height of tourist season in both countries.  We want to see as much of Australia as possible while we are there and then return to NZ and tour the South Island.  But we also already have jobs lined up back in the States and can’t spend too much time touring around!

  • Arrival in the Marquesas – Nuku Hiva Video #5

    Oh what a wonderful day it was. And our passage only took twenty one days. The majority of people we met in the Pacific this year took more than twenty five days and many took close to forty! It all depends on your luck with the wind and we had some great luck.

  • Crossing the Pacific Ocean (part 2) Video #4

    I created a new page for the site labeled Videos (above) so if you’re impatient you can view them all right there…right now.

    Christmas is coming up fast! Our friends on Zen arrived back in the states yesterday after their long trip home from NZ via Bangkok and New Delhi!  Geoff and Julie from Flashback, who we haven’t seen in a few months, are both back in Fiji and have planned a trip down to Auckland to join us for New Years Eve!  Allan and Rina on Follow You Follow Me are also back in the states for the holidays with their family.  Meanwhile Seth and Elizabeth have sold Honeymoon and are working their way down the eastern Australian coast to Sydney where their trip comes to an end.  Many of our other friends are finishing out the season in NZ or Australia before heading off to Southeast Asia and others are “nesting” for a while in those countries and getting jobs.  We have many friends spread across the globe after this season and it’s sad to see everyone breaking up and heading their own way but alas it is time.  The fun can’t last forever!

    Here’s episode #4.  The last bit of the passage and arrival in the Marquesas!