5 minute read
Puerto Vallarta to Hawaii
By Steve & Chelsea Olson - s/v Jean Anne
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While our 26-day trip from Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, to Ko'Olina, Oahu, Hawaii, was still fresh in our minds, Chelsea and I thought we’d answer some questions that we had been asked about the trip. We came up with this list of questions and each answered them before reading what the other person wrote. This was a voyage we’ll always remember! Read on and see why!
What was your favorite part of the trip?
STEVE: The day where we had the least amount of wind was actually one of my favorites. There was nothing we could do but relax. Swimming surrounded by those large fish hundreds of miles from anywhere was an experience I’ll never forget. CHELSEA: Ironically, the day we had no wind and only went 32 nautical miles.
The seas were so flat and calm, the water was so blue, and the boat was still. We swam with a hundred mahi mahi that day and got to look down into the water and see the endless blue that it was. It really was a once in a lifetime day.
What was the most difficult part of the trip?
STEVE: Just dealing with the swell at night when the wind would die down.
The boat would rock a lot, making it very difficult to sleep at all. Everything became more difficult and you constantly had to brace yourself to avoid injury. CHELSEA: The constant rolling of the boat. Everything was more difficult: brushing your teeth, cooking dinner, getting dressed. You ALWAYS needed one hand for the boat, sometimes even both hands to hold yourself still.
What was your biggest concern before leaving?
STEVE: Dealing with squalls at night.
This was our first time dealing with them. Our new doppler radar was pretty awesome, as it really highlighted these when we put it in weather mode. CHELSEA: Injuries. I was constantly reminding myself and Steve to move slowly and cautiously to avoid accidentally hurting ourselves underway. We have a medical kit onboard, and of course we know how to do basic first-aid, but I was worried about the bigger injuries (i.e., broken bones, deep burns, etc.).
How was the trip different than you expected?
STEVE: I never 100% felt great. I never got sick to my stomach, but, even weeks in, my stomach always felt just a little bit “off.” CHELSEA: It was definitely bouncier. I figured once we hit the trade winds, the swell would even out, and while it did, we still rocked quite a bit.
What did you bring, thinking you’d need, but hardly used?
STEVE: I loaded my Kindle and brought a bunch of DVDs, but didn’t read or watch as much as
I thought. Also, we thought we’d use the Hydrovane almost all the time, but our new autopilot was just so great that we used that a lot more. I’m glad we had the
Hydrovane though, for peace of mind in case the autopilot failed. CHELSEA: Mostly seasonings for food. I bought so much to make all these meals, but when you’re out there, the less flavor the better. Plain green veggies, lightly (if any) seasoned chicken. Plain applesauce. Bread with only peanut butter. Don’t plan crazy meals. The simpler, the better!
What do you wish you would have brought?
STEVE: Honestly, I thought a lot about this for a long time before the trip. I didn’t want to really be missing something, so I think we planned well.
The only thing I really wished we had was an installed wind generator. I will be buying one before we leave Hawaii for sure.
CHELSEA: A good, supportive pillow! The boat rolls around a lot and when trying to sleep, your body and head tosses and turns. I woke up almost half the nights with headaches from a tweaked neck. Also, I wish I would have made more already-made meals for the fi rst week. Something easy to throw into the oven or on the stove. The sea state was uncomfortable the fi rst 10 days or so. It made cooking diffi cult.
What did you learn from this trip?
STEVE: That we could actually do it.
The longest we had sailed non-stop prior was only four days. This trip really required us to manage all of our resources (electrical, food/water, etc.) and think long-term. CHELSEA: That I know more about sailing than I thought I did. Steve has always been the sailor and I just kinda helped, but after this trip, I realized that there’s quite a bit I know how to do. I kinda always saw myself as “the helper,” but now I think I could single-hand if I wanted to. Just to be clear — I don’t want to!
What advice would you give others about making this voyage?
STEVE: Make sure you are able to easily reef your boat and have a plan to be able to get the sails down/furled even under load. We planned for this and it made the trip SO MUCH less stressful.
Getting caught with too much sail up was one of my biggest concerns.
CHELSEA: Patience. For the boat, for yourself, for your partner. Shit’s going to break. It’s going to suck and make the crossing more diffi cult, but there’s nothing you can do. You and your partner are alone on this tiny, little boat and you’re going to get annoyed, but let it go. Tempers are going to get heated during the more trying times, but don’t let it simmer. Just let the issue go. There’s plenty of space and time for fi ghting when you reach land, ha!
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