Otago Daily Times

Challengin­g 16day voyage to beat MIQ

- ROBIN MARTIN

AUCKLAND: After months of unsuccessf­ully trying to get a space in managed isolation and quarantine, an Auckland woman has decided to sail home across the Pacific.

She and three other Kiwis are on a 13m yacht taking a 2200 nauticalmi­le trip from Tahiti to Opua, in Northland.

Katrina Hughes expected a bumpy voyage but said it would be worth it to be reunited with friends and family.

A chief steward on superyacht­s, she spent two years navigating Covid19 hotspots around the world before deciding to jump ship in the United States earlier this year and arrange to return to New Zealand.

But after making several unsuccessf­ul bids to secure an MIQ spot, she became disillusio­ned.

‘‘I thought ‘Sod it, I’ll try a third time’ . . . but you’ve got more chance of winning the damn lottery than you do this MIQ spot . . . and third time around I was 18,000 [in line] so I was like ‘This is a joke this isn’t working’.

‘‘And that’s when I heard of this guy who had decided to travel from Australia to New Zealand. Back home. He was a Kiwi guy.

‘‘He ended up sailing back and I thought, that’s kind of actually a good idea and I come from a sailing background and I started asking some questions.’’

Ms Hughes was put in touch with a New Zealand skipper who had bought a yacht in Tahiti so he could return home and who was looking for a New Zealand crew.

‘‘So there are three Kiwis all seafarers. We all came in from different areas. We’ve got one guy working on the fishing boats over in Mauritius and we had another fly in from the Philippine­s and the skipper was actually here a couple of weeks before us getting the boat together.’’

To meet Covid19 maritime border protocols, the yacht has been registered in New Zealand and acquired a new name

—the SV Kingfisher.

The yacht left Pape’ete on Friday and was expecting to take 16 days to reach Opua.

Ms Hughes said would not be all plain sailing.

‘‘At times it can be absolutely beautiful but on the flip side, it can be incredibly brutal as well. You will get seasick no doubt.

‘‘They’ll be times when the weather will pound you for days and days at a time and this is a bit of a smaller boat to what I’m used to, but we’ve all got the same goal in mind.’’

Marooned Seafarers group spokesman Kevin Judkins keeps a database of New Zealand mariners stuck overseas.

He put Ms Hughes in touch with the Kingfisher skipper, who asked not to be identified.

‘‘Katrina and her colleagues are on that database and one of them is a captain I think on a passenger ship. He was in Europe and he couldn’t get home so he decided to buy a yacht and crew it with diaspora seafarers and sail back to New Zealand to circumvent the MIQ requiremen­ts.’’

Mr Judkins said the voyage to Opua should prove a successful return.

‘‘To get to Tahiti they would’ve had to have had a negative Covid19 test and they would probably have had a test immediatel­y prior to their departure from Tahiti, so the 16day voyage counts as a 14day quarantine period.

‘‘So as long as they present a negative Covid test on arrival at Opua they do not have to undertake MIQ.’’

Ms Hughes still could not believe what she had to do to get around the MIQ system.

‘‘It’s absolutely crazy. It’s just so dishearten­ing when every time you try for an MIQ spot and every time you end up getting further and further down the line you wonder, ‘Is this for real, is someone playing a joke on me right now?’.

‘‘It’s awful. It’s horrible and when you go through that over time it just takes a little bit out of you each time and I thought, ‘Sod this there’s got to be another way to get home to your own country’.’’

She’s looking forward to Christmas with her family.

According to the MIQ website, private yachts are not exempt from the border closure and permission is assessed case by case.

The master needs to obtain clearance before leaving for New Zealand.

Upon arrival at Opua, the Kingfisher crew will be required to undertake a health check, get Customs clearance and have a Covid19 test.

They will need the permission of the local medical officer of health before disembarki­ng. — RNZ

 ?? PHOTO: SUPPLIED ?? Workaround . . . Katrina Hughes says the managed isolation and quarantine system is ‘‘horrible . . . it just takes a little bit out of you each time’’.
PHOTO: SUPPLIED Workaround . . . Katrina Hughes says the managed isolation and quarantine system is ‘‘horrible . . . it just takes a little bit out of you each time’’.

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