Arrival from Fiji – 1 October 2013. Momo at
anchor in Port Resolution -- named thus by Captain James Cook (after his ship), the first European to come to Tanna (the volcano beckoned) in 1774.
Port Resolution Yacht Club, Tanna Island.
You can see the various yacht and country flags hanging in the club. The locals are very welcoming, and make it easy to stop here.
Jana looking out over the anchorage in Port Resolution.
Tiara and coconut palms – signs of the South Pacific.
Dinghy ride around the entrance to the Port Resolution anchorage – cliffs and caves.
Carvings along the road, Tanna Island. Lola and Michelle drove one day with Johnson, Rossi, and Andrew to the village with a bank (we needed Vatu for our trip up the volcano – 5000 per person, equal to about $50; exchanged our remaining Fijian dollars). Along the way, like a taxi service, they stopped to pick up various people – some paid, some did not. Everyone knows everyone, and a car is a valuable commodity. We listened to some Vanuatu music along the way, with a reggae beat, and became acquainted with Johnson’s cousin, who writes his music from prison in Port Vila. Johnson tells us that he’s there because of stealing: the very poor must resort to stealing and it’s not even viewed as a bad thing, just sad that he got caught by the government -- but even that is not so bad, because he got a special cultural grant to support his music in prison, so he sits there with his recording equipment and produces CDs. We liked the music and even looked for some in Port Vila. We also went by the prison in Port Vila but didn’t hear any music that day.
Tanna (like many islands in Vanuatu, we gather) has a very strong sense of its own identity. The islanders are fiercely independent and proud of being their own people. They have resisted the effects of 'Europeanization' fairly well and even led a separatist movement in the 1970s. Maintaining their own customs and cultures, they are proud that many of their people remain in Tanna, not succumbing to the lure of the big city of Port Vila. Even in the early days of colonization, they resisted Christianity more successfully than other places. Their identity, interestingly, includes a staunch commitment to the John Frum Cargo Cult -- a faith that from a certain perspective is more firmly rooted in reality than the traditional religions of West.
Kids in Tanna. We
spent an afternoon strolling through the village at Port Resolution and talking to people. Among
other things, they are building some new public buildings and a school. I spoke
with the Australian woman in charge of the school project (nearly complete) who
was there just then to oversee the final steps. Sue, Andrew and Phil had all
participated in this project on their own free time, with Sue spearheading it
and raising Aus $200,000 over the last few years. She had first sailed here
with her husband on their boat some years back, and she fell in love with Tanna
Island, found some magic here and set about finding a way to give something of
her time and energy to this village.
Our host Johnson rings the village bell. We were told to
look for Stanley, but we never found Stanley. Johnson is Stanley’s brother, we
discovered – and apparently the current “go-to guy” in Tanna Village. On our trip across the island, Johnson stopped along the way back, and he and his friend went inside a house and returned with bowls of cassava and coconut milk
with bread for Lola and me. They sat on the side of the road and ate their
lunch then, which included, for dessert, white buns drizzled with sweetened
condensed milk. Lola and I enjoyed the cassava and coconut milk – delicious, as
always.
The village makes good money off the volcano. They have figured out how to make the most of their natural resource and have it very well organized for the visiting yachts and other tourists. They drive you there (30 min) and escort you up to the top. We left around 5pm so we could get there in time to see it in the light and then at dark, too.
Another of the volcano.
Leaving Tanna – sailing to Port Villa and
waving goodbye to the volcano, which we found just as impressive from this view
as from the close-up range. It spews constantly, and you can see it for miles. No wonder Cook stopped here.
Our introduction to the urban language of Port Vila (called Bislama) came mostly from signs around town. Always fun to decipher. Here, a private home with a warning sign against trespassing. TABU: Yu no kam insaed = You no come inside.
Calcium for strong teeth and bones + iron
for making you strong. You get the idea. Vanuatu Ministry of Health is watching
out for its people.
Number one water.
Some views strolling around Port Vila and its environs.
Even in town the papaya grows in almost every garden.
Beautiful gardens in Port Vila.
Lola and the iguana. One of the things we
grew tired of in Port Vila was how everyone wants to sell you something. Even
this nice fellow walking by wanted to share more than just his cool pet. He
stopped and let the kids hold it, showed them a few tricks with him, and smiled
as we snapped photos. Then he asked for money for the photos we took. That is:
he asked for money since he and his pet were the subject of our photos. We
tipped him and smiled but grumbled, just a little.
One of the best things in Port Vila was the French baked goods.Quiche, pastries, pain au chocolat, glace… all delicious. We also purchased bread and croissants, but they did not last long enough to count as provisioning for the next leg of our journey.
Port Vila’s market was fun.
Vegetables, fruits, flowers, fish. A big space with a lot of variety. We
enjoyed shopping here but did not find it especially cheap. Still, we stocked
up on certain supplies for our trip to Indonesia, purchasing as much large
grapefruit as we could carry (each of us had a heavy bag or two), and other
staples. In the shopping centers, we bought coffee, beer, bread, butter and
pate.
Walking back down to the harbor after a
stroll up around town and through the suburbs. The main street of Port Vila
runs along the waterfront, and then various roads lead up and away to the
government buildings, the museum, and other commercial sites – car rentals,
grocery stores, laundry, etc.
Port Vila harbor view -- Momo among anchored boats.
Cooling off. Some days in Vila were hot – and we anchored outside
the main mooring field so the kids could jump off the boat and cool down.
Lola up the mast. Lola and Jana have been
swinging on the bosun’s chair for as long as we can remember. Now that they are
getting bigger, they are venturing further up the mast. You can’t really swing
from the top, but it offers a great view of the harbor. Next time we’ll send her with a bag of tools
and have her fix something up there.
Our checklist in Vila included sorting our
Internet so we could do a few last things online before disappearing for a
month, fixing our nav station light, getting a new back-up handheld GPS (one of
our backups had died), printing Indonesia paperwork so we’d be prepared upon
arrival, locating some of the weather and sailing nets for the next crossing,
checking the rig, shackles, reefing lines, chain plate bolts (stern) and
Jerome’s bearings (self-steering gear), and of course stocking up on water.
Saying goodbye to the family on Pacific
Bliss. We met in them Port Vila only briefly but we expect we’ll see them again, as
they’re now settled in Nelson, NZ. One of our last stops in Port Vila was to
have a beautiful steak luncheon at a restaurant outside of town, recommended by
Colin and Liz. Lovely view, nice French waiter, good food and wine.
And, at $10 a plate, it was a bargain in this town.
Pulling up anchor and putting Vanuatu behind us… but first, we must dislodge a large hunk of rock stuck on our anchor. Bernie had to climb on top and stomp quite a bit, but even that did not help. He finally secured a line around it so we could ‘tip’ it and change the balance. It had settled into a perfectly balanced state on our anchor and was not going anywhere without a lot of encouragement. I worried that Bernie might go with it, but he managed to stay dry.
Goodbye Port Vila....Next stop, Torres Strait.