Sea Days: Oct. 13-19 from Hawaii to American Samoa

Thus began 6 days of sloth and slumber. With 3 hours per day spent in the gym in an attempt, successful I might add, to control the waistline. Despite being thousands of miles out in the Pacific, we had frequent visitors. Scores of flying fish, large pods of leaping spinner dolphins (many mothers with babies in tandem), a heraldic albatross, and the occasional lumbering turtle.

A school of juveniles. Zoom in! They look like aliens when they all emerge from the ocean!!!

Fourth day out, we were scheduled to call on Fanning Island, a remote atoll in Kirabati. The island has no electricity and no running water. The last cruise ship to visit there was last March. There was a snafu in their Customs control, and as a result our visit was cancelled the night prior. So instead, we did a circumnavigation, which apparently no cruise line does, so we did get to see a lot of the atoll. The interior lagoon is 40 square miles! Talk about having to walk a long way to school and back!!

I’m happy to say that later in the day, at approximately 10:00pm, I became a member of the Golden Shellback Club. This club is the exclusive haunt of high sea travelers who have crossed the Equator AND the International Date Line simultaneously. There are no dues, and no benefits other than receiving a certificate, suitable for framing. LOL. Quite honestly, I didn’t even know what day it wasn’t!

There is a benefit to being a passenger and not crew and avoiding the induction ceremony, held top deck the next afternoon in the broiling sun. Polywogs, as the crew initiates are known, must follow the commands of King Neptune and his Queen, which typically include pledging solidarity with various forms of sea life by making out with them! Totally gross! And hilarious!

Three more days of deep blue sea and we arrive at American Samoa. Here’s a few pics of my cozy cabin retreat on Deck 1.

Mahalo and Aloha

3 responses to “Sea Days: Oct. 13-19 from Hawaii to American Samoa”

  1. Will, I am enjoying your travelogues very much! Wonderfully written. Your mention of your grandfather and his death in Tokyo Bay was a wonderful tale. And it brought to mind my story of my own father. Jim Cox Sr. was on the USS Intrepid in the last year and a half of the war. Among some things of his I inherited is a photo of the ship, all planes on deck, dressed, in Tokyo Bay with Mt. Fuji in the background. Taken shortly after the surrender, as the carrier was among the first US ships to enter Tokyo Bay. So there is a possibility that your Grandfather could have been in service around the same time, making the bay safe for our navy.

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  2. Hello,

    I have been traveling to DC, so I got really behind on reading your blog. …. Now I have plenty of time since I returned home to discover I have Covid. Wednesday night I had a little fever, tested positive on Thursday. … it has just been like a sinus infection. I feel much better today. .. been sleeping a lot.

    In pictures 6 and 7 about Fanning Island, is that the lagoon – the different colored water?

    I will say I am getting much educated from your posts! I keep looking up things you right.

    Did any of the flying fish land on the ship? I learned about flying fish when my students were following the Around Alone yacht race. (one person, one boat, around the world). Are the flying fish a problem or just a curiosity?

    Glsd you are having such fun!!

    I had fun on my trip because I got to see lots of people I know – first at the Assoc for Mid Lev Ed conference. Then, I had a long lunch with Frances Moffat (flute), Anne Elizabeth Murdy (oboe), and Susan Spagnoli (clarinet). On Sunday I went to church and spent the day with Sean Sands (clarinet). I traveled down on the Del-Mar-Va peninsula on Monday to have lunch with my Mars Hill classmate and dinner with one of my KIDLINK friends. On the way home I had lunch with another KIDLINK friend. (KIDLINK – the first FREE opportunity for doing collaborative projects with kids across the globe. I first joined in 1991. We had members in 200 countries.).

    On Monday and Tuesday nights I stayed with Evergreen Travel Club members for $20 per night. You might like to consider joining when you return if you want to travel in the county – and beyond. The membership dues are about $120. I think I save that much in one night’s stay.

    Have a grand time! Rebecca Rebecca

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    1. Hello Rebecca- sounds like you had a great time in the DC area. Certainly is the best time of year to be there.
      Yes, the lighter colored water is the lagoon water inside the atoll.
      Flying fish sometimes do land on a boat’s deck, but usually it’s a sailboat close to the water. The lowest open deck on the Volendam is 50 feet above the water line. We actually need telescope lenses to photograph them.
      Thanks for checking in!

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