The mooring field off Taina Marina with Tahiti in the background
The Good
Broccoli! Fresh mushrooms! Different kinds of meat, cheese and bread! The selection, the air conditioning, the space, the pure joy of shopping in a western-style, mosquito-free, well-lit grocery store (like the Carrefour) pleases many of our deprived senses. We still like chicken, carrots, onions, garlic and cabbage, and we still enjoy a fresh baguette once in a while, but it is mighty nice to have a change in diet for now. Although the abundance of tasty (fatty) foods is already showing a change in “belly looks” as well!
A western-style mall and supermarket
Other (English speaking) cruisers! Yes, we can finally
communicate in earnest again and have a social calendar to prove it. The new
cruising season has started and a new group of sailors has crossed (and is
crossing) the extensive Pacific. We caught up with a few people we met in
French Polynesia and the Galapagos last year; they are all here for the same
reason: to work on their boats! And, I managed to meet and talk to Yvan
Bourgnon, the famous Swiss-French sailor who is trying to set two world
records.
Marine stores! There are a few “real” marine stores –
although as with most of the stores here, the choices, availability and prices
in Panama were much better – so we have managed to check some items off our “to
buy” list. Now, we still have to find (or order) the other 95 items…
The wireless internet is not too bad. Some providers truly
suck – yes, even here, Ioranet is deficient - but after a few tries and tons of
money, we think we found some reliable internet, most of the time…
English (and tourism) is more common here, so communicating
with the locals and the French ex-pats is much easier, especially for Mark.
The view of Mo’orea across the channel and a full moon above
the Tahitian hills is something honeymooners and other vacationers pay hundreds
of dollars for and enjoy from their hotel balconies. All we have to do is drop
anchor or pick up a mooring and look around us.
The Bad
The cost of everything but baguettes (and the usual subsidized items – chicken, rice, pasta, sugar, milk, the four vegetables …) is outrageous. Now that we can finally touch the items we have so long desired, we have to consider whether they are worth the high price. Of course, we splurged on some goat cheese, croissants, salami and ice cream the first couple of days, but now we are back to “the usual” food stuffs, with something extra here and there. Tomatoes cost $4 a pound, zucchini $5 (we have not eaten any of these yet), chicken breast $14 a pound (when I wrote chicken before, it meant whole chicken – frozen). Boat products cost twice the price than in the States, alcohol – other than beer ($2 a bottle) - is still unaffordable (the cheapest wine costs $8 a bottle, drinkable rum costs over $40 a bottle) and tax and import duty is high. To order something into the country (with a value of over $300 including the shipping costs, which are taxed as well!), you need to use an agent, who charges $250 and up. This would add 20% to the cost of a new jib ordered from abroad for example. On the other hand, if we would buy a new jib here, it would cost four times more.
Pape’ete is a city, so… it is busy. Four to six lane roads,
traffic jams, cars parked everywhere, people crowding the stores, dinghies
buzzing back and forth in the anchorage and local boat traffic creating massive
wakes, especially in the weekends. There is music, there are fumes, there is
garbage, there is smoke from fires, grit from construction, and noise from
landing planes. Parts of the mooring field consist of garbage, seaweed and
scum, making showering impossible and creating massive stains on our waterline.
Many people make Taina Marina their home, so the selection of moorings is very
limited. A spot in the marina itself costs $60 a night for a catamaran of 35
feet (no weekly or monthly fees) in this high season. But, they are full at the
moment anyway. The World ARC fleet is here…
The heat and the hassle trying to locate necessary boat
items are very draining. The sun, especially when there is no wind, can be
relentless. The distances between useful stores are big. There is a main bus
route (every trip costs $2 per person which adds up quickly) to and from the
city, but most of the time, we are walking for hours to get to a store, only to
discover that they don’t have anything we need – either it is not in stock,
unavailable or the wrong size.
The ugly
I will just repeat here that Pape’ete is a city and that comes with the ugliness of a city: noise, smells, dirt, crime, crowds, garbage, expense, and lack of authenticity. It sometimes reminds us of a third world country, but with higher than first world prices.
Parking lot at the Carrefour grocery store
It is possible, however, to find a relatively remote mooring
ball or spot to anchor and forget about it all, until you have to take that 30
minute dinghy ride to amenities and facilities again! :-)
Meeting up with Mark and Marian from SV Zenna and getting to know Emma, who took care of SV Liward during the owners' absence
Sister island Mo'orea during the day
Ma Louloute on a mooring ball in front of Marina Taina during Yvan's visit in Tahiti
Yvan Bourgnon and his wife Nadia, who joined the support boat in Fakarava