Vanuatu to Australia


The hurricane scare just before we departed Vanuatu in Oct. has us convinced that Oct./Nov. are not good months for us with the anniversary of our dismasting, 4 hurricanes, and now an emergency appendectomy and hernia operations. Fortunately we had arrived in Australia after a delightful weeklong sail from Vanuatu and had time to get Ted to the hospital in Brisbane, almost. Medical care here is outstanding and maybe worth traveling from the states for something serious as their Private hospital system is efficient, skilled, and much cheaper than US prices. Now we are sitting in northern Queensland and will move the boat south in another month after Ted recovers sufficiently and in the meantime the kangaroos and emus are hopping around in the evening.








With small villages of 25 people these islands do not have the services that we were used to in other countries so laundry and showers were done in waterfalls and we carried all the food, water and fuel that we would need for a month or 2, trying to gauge the correct amount knowing that most items would be forbidden upon entry to Australia. Bill Dean crewed for us the last few months and has now left to return to the states. He has traveled with us on past voyages and will probably return for future ones.
Vanuatu differs from Fiji in that we didn't have to offer Kava to the chief in order to access the land but even here there were certain courtesys necessary when arriving in an anchorage. We were not free to walk until introductions had been made and in some instances money changed hands but everywhere we were greeted by villagers and accompanied by children. Dances are held for special occasions such as a circumcision and the men and women from surrounding villages gather to perform in a sacred part of the village. Some areas are off-limits to women who definitely are 2nd class citizens in this culture. The following photos speak for themselves.
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