When we cleared into Ensenada Mexico in late December it wasn’t clear when I’d need these American Dollars I had from the craigslist firesale of everything “unneeded”. Here in the middle of Polynesia is a little bit of ‘Merica.
Our original plans to head to Tonga changed given the weather, which has continued to be unfavorable for passage and stay in Tonga. 450 miles west of Suwarrow lays American Somoa; four islands of polynesian history that are an American Territory. So yes – McDonalds, ACE Hardware, English speakers, US Dollars (no FX charges on your Visa card). What we didn’t expect was stunning beauty, a combination of the Marquesas Islands with convenience of a weekend at Catalina.
Industrial, but surely beautiful.
Best hardware store in south pacific.
The locals cannot wait to tell us about the McDonalds.
Mark is ready to move here.
Riding the local bus is quite an experience. Each one is equipped full-power stereo broadcasting American pop music. Check out the video at the end.
After a quick survey of the main port of Pago Pago, we arranged with the Port Captain to visit the Manu’a Islands east of the main island. We found a small harbor in Ofu, offloaded our mountain bikes to find a sand / dirt road to a small village, then some pavement that ends at the end of the 2100′ runway to Ofu airport (about the size of San Carlos). With no scheduled flights or planes in site, we biked down the runway (love being on the centerline), and stopped at the ranger station at the other end of the runway. US Park Service – yes, professional ranger with maps, and plenty of information about the park on the island. Carlo the ranger here has a different view than his counterparts at Yosemite. We continued a ride over to survey the anchorage of the town / house of Sili, then headed back to Gray Matter.
NPS boat, with boathouse in construction.
National Park – untouched beach and stunning coral.
View at Sili anchorage.
After 3 days exploring and diving two of the spectacular coral reefs we headed back to Pago Pago. We’ll fuel and provision (yes reload some Napa Cab Sav at duty-free prices) and then head to Fiji early the week of July 22.
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the pics are amazing,i do have question, when you travel between locations meaning as you travel west how do you set your schedule when cruising whether 60 miles 600 miles do you stay up at night or do you have help at watch or is just the two of you handling all aspects of
cruising? from the pics the trip has to be unbelievable a trip of a life time! thank you tom temp in reno,nv today 7-18-13 100 degrees
Thanks for your question Tom. We plan our trips around the weather. There are many good sources of weather even for remote locations like American Somoa, Fiji etc. We look for a window with winds less than 20 knots and seas less than 9 feet. We have made all the overnight passages with just two onboard, and we share the watch schedule with Christine taking the first 4 – 5 hours, and Mark taking the last 4 – 5 hours. We stay flexible and relieve each other if one is too tired to stay awake. With some additional naps during the day, we normally get pretty rest.
Looks fantastic in Samoa. Please let us know how much you end up paying for diesel there.
Kind regards,
Peter
I know we’ve been silent for way too long but we’ve been checking out your blog frequently. Amazing trip. By the time you’re done with this trip you’ll be ready for your master mechanic exams. Keep the blogs coming. DRH
Forgot to tell you guys that Dan had a summer internship in Guiyang China for 6 weeks. He came back the same day as the Asiana crash but was always set for landing in LA so no major impact (UA was a major player in the background trying to get that runway opened ASAP). Couldn’t get Dan back here for several days (but that’s a different story). Suffice it to say, he learned a lot about inland China and we’ve gained a tiny insight on where Christine came from. My stories of Hong Kong were way different from his stories of Guiyang – a different world inland. Lots of stories when we finally get together again.
It’s the 25th here in the States and that means it’s time to wish Moshe a happy birthday! Not getting him anything as he seems to have everything he wants…