Our basil plants – raised in tropical Panama – are dying. They look pathetic and in order to prevent them of becoming totally extinct on Irie, we have to move to warmer climes. They just do not like the cold and gusty conditions in the Gambier Islands and neither do we.
I was going to write a summary blog about the Gambier
islands, because there is so much I have left out previously (who wants to read
1000-word blogs?), but I am running out of time, so the contents will have to
be turned into an article one day. Once we leave here, there are other adventures
and experiences to be had and to write about!
No place in the world is perfect, otherwise, we would have
to stay and quit the traveling… Mark and I enjoyed our time in the Gambier and
if it wasn’t for the crappy, cold and stormy winter weather, we would have stayed
much longer in this area. The islands are beautiful, bountiful, lush,
interesting, special, diverse, cultural and friendly. And for that we say
“Maroi nui” and “Nana” to the people and the archipelago of the Gambier Islands!
Choppy seas and white caps in the Gambier lagoon, seen from Rikitea
Our track on the crappiest and most sleepless night in Rikitea. We moved all over the place within "our anchoring circle", we "sailed" a distance of about 3 miles! Yes, there were other boats anchored within this circle, and the water is deep (45 feet), so you need a lot of chain out...
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