SV VIVA SHARES PASSAGE REPORT:

SAMOA TO WALLIS ISLAND

SVย VIVA sailed across the Pacific Ocean earlier in 2024, cruised through French Polynesia, and are continuing west to Fiji before Cyclone season begins in November.ย  While they are getting closer to their destination, the journey to their destination most recently includes visiting Samoa and sailing onward to Wallis Island.
Pierre and Marie raise the Samoan courtesy flag.
Beach bungalows are called Fale in Samoa.ย  Fale is the Samoan word for house of any size. Traditionally, a Samoan fale is an oval or circular shape, has a domed, thatched roof held up with wooden poles and has no permanent walls. Roll-down blinds, called pola, surrounded the structure.
Family in Fare on the beach selling coconut products
The Samoan beaches are beautiful.
Marie with local Parish leader
Here SV VIVA shares about their time in Samoa:
Samoa, what a Gem!
Arrived Apia Tue 1 Oct, By 11am we were checked-in!
Samoa, (known until 1997 as Western Samoa), is a country with a population of 207,000 consisting of two main islands Upolu and Savaii.
We spent 6 days driving around on the left side of the road and experiencing Samoaโ€™s rich culture. We crossed to Savaii island (quite the ferry ride) where we spent a night in a beach fale and met cool Australians.ย  Back on Upolu, we experienced a fire dance show, snorkeled with giant clams, swam at the sea trench, hiked at O Le Pupu National park. Enjoyed seeing Samoa preparing for a major upcoming Commonwealth event (CHOGM) (King Charles is coming!)
On Sunday we decided to experience a Samoan church service, and were invited to their parish afternoon celebration. The experience and people we met were memorable: singing, dancing, eating and our first Kava ceremony! We felt like their special guests for the day.
Unique facts we want to remember about Samoa:
-For cruisers, not much anchorage hopping to be done but lots to see and experience on land.
– Communities are clean, well maintained and well decorated.
– Communities are alive with people, children, animals- dogs, pigs, cows.
– People are friendly, look happy, generous and proud of their environment.
– Schools everywhere, mostly primary
– Churches everywhere, primarily catholic but yet several denominations
– Religion plays a big part in their lives
– Witnessed a traditional Funeral mourning ceremony (thanks Douglas for welcoming us!)
– Witnessed People working on houses, roads, fales – painting, fixing, cleaning- not much sitting around waiting for time to pass
– People do lots with not much – painting rocks and coconut mounds, sculpting painted tree trunk, decorating tires, putting up flags
– No appearance of any danger, crime or corruption, no homeless nor begging
– Did not observe a culture of music playing (vs other Polynesian islands)
– Food tasted good but really fattening- lots of fried stuff, chicken, pork, sausage, curries, chow meinโ€ฆ
Next port – Wallis and Futuna 260 nm away.
SV VIVA just sailed 60 hours from Samoa to the remote island of Wallis Island.
Upon their arrival into the lagoon of Wallis Island SVย VIVA shares their passage report from Samoa to Wallis Island:
Weโ€™re glad this passage is almost over, 270 nautical miles from Samoa to Wallis island, we had great wind 18-24 kts for 48 hrs so no motoring! But rough sea, 3-4m swells 9sec period which meant we were pinned down to our seats. Difficult to standup, move or do anythingโ€ฆ basically pulling gโ€™s for 2 days!
One last hurdle before setting the anchor is going through this small pass to get inside Wallis, we timed it right with the tide slack butโ€ฆwe canโ€™t get in!!! There is a very strong squall hitting us right now and we canโ€™t see ahead of us more than 100 yards, so letโ€™s do the safe thing and waitโ€ฆ
Wallis is a very small island and a French protectorateโ€ฆ.weโ€™re already dreaming of baguettes!!ย  Two weeks to go before we haul out and store Viva in Fiji for the cyclone season.
Marie enjoys a warm beverage on their overnight passage.
At the entrance to the lagoon another screen shows the chart view split with a satellite view of the entrance. Entering the lagoon at slack tide is the safest way in. VIva timed their entrance for slack but had no way to hold off the storm. Instead, they just circled slowly for 30 minutes waiting for squall to pass, in front of Wallis pass.
Redundancy in charts and electronics is important on SV VIVA. Shown here is a split screen with Navionics charts and their radar. Ideally the two display the same contours!
After a rather rocky passage, Pierre is happy to be in the remote and calm lagoon.