Sorry it's been so long... of course we've been
having a wonderful time in magical places. Also there's been very
little internet available, at least rarely fast enough to be willing
to pay for. We've been moving often and so it's nice to be able to
take stock now of how far we've come.
More photos from the Marquesas as it took too long to upload them whilst we were still there.
Jacques Brel's grave; the Belgian chanteur who
amongst many other hearty rich songs in french wrote the ports of
'Amsterdam' which David Bowie covered. The flowers pictured lie on
the floor all over these islands under the small trees that grow them
and the women really do almost always wear one behind their ear; very
becoming.
Several of the anchorages were quite uncomfortable
with swells coming into the bays unhindered. These kept our boat in
motion in a rather annoying manner, so when we found Anaho bay on
Nuku Hiva to be well sheltered we knew we'd struck gold. It didn't
hurt that it looked like this and that the walk over the hills was
peppered with coconut, lime and Pamplemouse (big sweet grapefruit)
trees.
We found a bit of time between walks and socialising to improve the dinghy towards being able to sail it. The Marquesas were varied and beautiful but it was time to push on towards the Tuamotus.
The islands of French Polynesia like almost all
Pacific islands are the product of volcanic activity. Darwin was the
first to theorise during his Beagle voyage that the
radically different high islands and the low atolls were all part of
the same process in different stages.
The Marquesas are an example of relatively
recently formed volcanic activity. A weakness in the ocean floor
allows magma to bulge and spill out, gradually building to the
surface. There the action may continue giving rise to huge volcanic
peaks, craters, lava sides and basalt plugs. Once the volcanic
action slows and stops the elements start eroding the island. Birds,
ocean currents and winds bring seeds, soil begins to form and life
starts to weave itself around the island.
In warm waters coral polyps are brought by
currents and affix themselves to the edge of the island. Coral grows
from a depth of 50m to the surface at a very slow rate but this is
then able to keep pace with the erosion and gradual sinking or
melting of the rock back into the ocean floor. As the rock of the
island slowly sinks away, the reef around the outside of the island
continues to grow up to the surface and build upon the old dead
coral. This makes an outer reef where the edge of the island used to
be, then water fills the gap as the land sinks and erodes leaving
island surrounded by lagoon then reef. This is how the Society
islands are which is where we are now.
As the rock continues to sink and erode then often
all that remains is the original volcanoes crater in the middle full
of water then eventually all that is left is the coral reef around
the outside. This keeps growing in pace and as the waves pound the
coral then broken coral often builds up behind the reef. This then
can form small sand and dead coral islands called a 'Motu'. So an
atoll is a ring of coral with shallower sea in the middle and often
with sand islands around it's edge.
The Tuamotus are such atolls which are at the end
of this process. The sea around the atolls is usually very deep so
they rise up very steeply out of the ocean. Whilst the islands were
still high, they produce lots of rain and therefore streams flow down
their sides. Where these enter the sea the coral does not grow so
this creates gaps in the reef which we use as 'reef passes'. The
currents in and out of these are often strong and depend on tide,
wave direction and wind. Traversing them can be an experience! This
one was easy to see and the weather was calm, nevertheless we had to
motor in against a 3-4 knot current.
We had only a week or so in the Tuamotus and
visited only 2 atolls. They were astonishingly quiet and peaceful.
They are sporadically inhabited and farmed by Polynesians who trade
dried coconut 'copra' used to make oil and cultivate pearls in their
lagoons. It would be perfectly possible to spend weeks on each coral
atoll of which there are 76 and rarely see anyone. This is a place
to relax.
It was a beautiful gentle downwind sail onwards to
the society islands which was an extremely welcome change to what the
trade winds have been throwing at us up until now. These are mostly
high islands which have well developed reef around them. The biggest
is Tahiti and perhaps as famous Bora Bora which has been called the
most beautiful island in the world by some. Duncan's parents Chris
and Jean have been visiting us so we've been enjoying showing them
around and introducing them to our life.
Just another great writing and it came right on my 69th birthday, 26 September....what a great present. So many folks look forward to my re-posting of your great adventures and pictures. Please keep the good work up. Many of my friends have indicated that they are living the adventure through you. Some have lost their spouse (their partner through this life) and find your writings to be inspirational and a break from the trials of life's daily routines. Thank you so much for taking the time to keep us all posted. I am also soooo happy that the proof of not being a robot has become much easier to read!!!! Mike & Ruby
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