quarantine

A New Year's Miracle!

I’ve heard of holiday miracles, but never New Year’s miracles...?!?

Last night I received word that results were in for all of salty dog Zia’s tests and I could pick her up today!!! 😮😍

Kind new local friends lent me wheels to make the long drive (on the left side of the road—eeep!) to the facility south of Auckland. I brought Zia’s favorite toys, and found out where the nearest place to run free was. At 1 PM on the dot, they gave her back to me... and I have never seen her eyes so big or her grin so wide!!! She took an hour to calm down enough to start the drive to the park. When we got there, she ran and ran and ran, and I think my heart exploded with happiness. ❤️🐶❤️

This journey has its ups and downs, and I learn so much from all of it, but I am so so so thankful for this beautiful, soaring high up of a day! Reunited with my partner, I feel whole again, and ready for all the joys and challenges of 2020. Wishing everyone a new year full of miracles and big smiles! xo 🙏💕😘⛵️

Landfall in New Zealand!

On December 11th at 6 AM, after 18 days at sea, we made landfall in the Bay of Islands, New Zealand. WOOHOOOO! It has been my dream for two and a half years to complete this leg of our circumnavigation, and even though we limped in with a dead engine, it felt amazing to know we’d made it!

The NZ Coast Guard and customs were really cool about letting us drop anchor in the only bay I felt confident sailing into. We had just come through 70 hours of bad weather with two systems basically back to back, so I hadn’t really slept in days and needed to rest before I could tackle the engine. With our quarantine flag up, I went to sleep for four hours. I awoke to a beautiful, sunny day, and when I stood in the cockpit to take in the scenery, I noticed that a friend boat I hadn’t seen since the Marquesas in July were anchored in the same bay! Since we were under quarantine, we weren’t permitted to visit each other, but it was still reassuring to see friends in our new home.

I spent the rest of the day working on the engine. Yet another impeller had degraded and blocked up the raw water flow through the hoses and my heat exchanger. By the time I put the engine back together, it was dark and I didn’t want to travel the final five nautical miles upriver to the customs quarantine dock until daylight. The next day, we cruised up to the dock and cleared-in. It was an easy process, and since I was the only boat, I didn’t even have to wait long. Two days later, they took Zia away for quarantine.

Lots of things have happened since landfall, and I have so much to share from my last passage since I lost satellite communications and couldn’t write to our supporters. Be on the lookout for new Logs in your inbox soon! Until then, you can stay posted on our day-to-day via our instagram or facebook.

Want to see us keep going? Please consider buying one of our limited edition 2020 calendars! You can enjoy the South Pacific all year long. :) Proceeds will help cover the cost of Zia’s very expensive quarantine fees.

xo & fair winds,
elana, zia, and s/v windfola ⛵️💕31 December, 2019; Opua, Bay of Islands, New Zealand

Christmas and Zia in Quarantine

Christmas was lonely this year without my little one, who is still in quarantine and not permitted visitors. I stole away to some remote bays without cellular data to spend quiet time with my tears, both for Zia and for my mom, whose birthday is Christmas Day. Even though she passed when I was little, I feel her absence and her presence with me every day, and most acutely this time of year. This year, I felt Zia’s absence too, but beneath the tears I felt overwhelming gratitude for both of them, because their love is part of the foundation for my strength to cross oceans.

I don’t believe we can really accomplish anything in this life alone—I know I don’t! It’s the love of others that fills our sails, and we just take the helm. Thank you, Mom, Zia, and all, for your love and support. Because that is what really matters this season, and all the year through. ❤️🙏🐶