Cook Islands, Aitutaki: A Great Place to Break the South Pacific Crossing

As they left French Polynesia to cross the South Pacific to Fiji, Jim and Pam Yares of SV Roam intended to only stay a few days on Aitutaki in the Cook Islands as they headed for Tonga. But the weather had other plans and while they waited for a weather window they were welcomed with open arms by the “yachtie” friendly islanders.

Published 5 days ago

Reprinted with permission from Jim Yares of SailRoam

A Popular Tropical Vacation Destination

The Cook Islands are to New Zealand what Hawaii is to the US. They are a popular tropical vacation destination. If the island of Rarotonga is Oahu, Aitutaki is Kauai, the low-key, cool little brother. The islanders there like it that way.

The Cook Islands lie along the 1,600 nautical mile stretch of ocean between French Polynesia, Tonga and Fiji. Image from SV Roam website (c) Jim Yares.

These are remote places—halfway along the 1,600 mile stretch between French Polynesia and Fiji. The difference is that 10.1 million tourists visit Hawaii in a year while just 130,000 visit the Cook Islands.  Most of those visit Rarotonga with only about 30,000 of those making it all the way out to Aitutaki.

The newly dredged pass into Arutanga Harbor, Aitutaki. It’s about four meters deep. Yachts drawing more than two meters won’t have much room to move once inside the harbor. Image from SV Roam website. (c) Jim Yares.

We intended to stay for only a few days. The early season South Pacific Convergence Zone (SPCZ) had other ideas and cooked up some adverse winds and seas. We waited 11 days for good weather. We were glad we did. The locals universally love having the “yacthies” (their term) visit.

Arutanga Harbor, Aitutaki, Cook Islands. SV Roam (center) with nine friends rafted up and stern-tied to the land berm behind us. The harbor is a work in progress. In 2024 the island discouraged yachts from visiting in order to finish the dredging. Image from SV Roam website. (c) Jim Yares.

Great coffee and good eating!

We found great prices due to the New Zealand dollar exchange rate—especially compared to the cost of everything in French Polynesia.

We enjoyed great coffee (yay) and good eating. We met quite a few New Zealand travelers. The Kiwis have a strong sailing culture. The tourists we met all wanted to talk sailing. Many rode their rental scooters out to the harbor to chat with us from shore.

Cheeseburger on arrival. New Zealand’s influence causes these people to put beets on their cheeseburgers. Yes. Beets. Image from SV Roam website. (c) Jim Yares.

No dogs – just roosters

The island is dog-free. Not a single dog anywhere. Consequently, the resident roosters are quite full of themselves. It’s the first place we’ve been without a big population of street dogs.

What began as a way to break up the long haul to Tonga wound up a highlight. The Cook Islands are our third country aboard Roam. Friendly people. The NZ dollar is about half the USD, so prices are astoundingly cheap–especially compared to French Polynesia, where we have been for the past year.

Spectacular coral canyons just outside the pass. Bull sharks, tiger sharks, giant turtles, and a manta ray. Amazing diving. You have to be mindful of the depth. The water is so clear and the coral is endless. It can pull you deeper than you want to go. Kyle (SV Forty-two) leads the way. Image from SV Roam website. (c) Jim Yares.

Highlights

  • Pacific Resort. Great restaurant. Friendly service. Excellent couples massage. Good pool.
  • Avatea Cafe. Best coffee on the island. Breakfast/brunch.
  • Restaurant Tava’e: Happy hour and pizza. Great view from the deck
  • WokKai. Stir fry take out
  • MVA Tunu 2nu: Food truck. Bacon, egg, and cheeseburger
  • BoatShed: Sushi! and a good bar
  • Teking Lagoon Tour: Snorkel Safari. Three snorkel stops and BBQ lunch.

Fees for Visiting Yachts

  • Health inspector: $20NZD ($40NZD on weekends). He will lightly fumigate the boat and clear your quarantine flag.
  • Bio Security Inspector: $20NZD
  • Customs/Immigration Departure Tax: $80.80NZD per person ($57 additional for weekends)
  • Island Council Anchoring Fee: $20NZD per night
Clearing customs and immigration in preparation for our departure from Aitutaki. Image from SV Roam website. (c) Jim Yares.

Ready to Leave

We left Aitutaki for Tonga via Niue in the morning. There’s always a nervous energy the night before a long passage—thinking about the weather, the route, the sea state, the sail configuration, the things to check before we pull the lines.

These are big crossings—600 miles of open ocean. Just the two of us, relying on each other.
It was a long night. We had strong westerlies with squalls. We are rafted up with nine other boats—all of us with lines and anchors off our sterns onto the land berm behind us.

We had mid-20 knot winds gusting to 44 knots during the squalls. It was enough to break loose our stern anchor, which was wedged between two boulders. It rolled one of the boulders completely up and out.

The wind pushed us onto our neighbors. We were all up at 4:00 a.m. Jacob and Kyle from next door went ashore and reset our stern anchor. They tied off a second line to a boulder. I tended the lines boat-side, using the starboard engine in full reverse and the electric primary winches to grind us back into position. It all worked out. Morning arrived with all the boats in good shape. The roar of the wind, the fitful sleep and the stress of it are tiring.

Jim and Pam Yares
SV Roam

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About the Authors

Pam and Jim Yares have both been sailing since they were kids. This is their 6th boat together, their first catamaran and second cruise. They have always wanted to sail the South Pacific and that’s where they are now.

 

Roam is a 2001 Catana 472 designed by Christophe Barreau and built by Catana in Canet-en-Roussillon, France. The 472 is a higher-spec version of the legendary 471. Approximately 90 471s were built of which 12 were finished as 472s. Roam was built as 471 hull #35 and finished as 472 hull #09.

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