Christmas Island/Kiritimati - General Info
Description:
Kiritimati (sometimes Christmas Island) is a Pacific Ocean raised coral atoll in the northern Line Islands, and part of the Republic of Kiribati.
The name “Kiritimati” is a rather straightforward respelling of the English word “Christmas” in the Kiribati language.
The island has the greatest land area of any coral atoll in the world, about 388 square kilometres, its lagoon is roughly the same size. Abundant in wildlife and very popular with bone fisherman, Kiritimati is very beautiful and very isolated.
Position:
01° 59.08’N 157° 28.83’W (anchorage)
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Related to following destinations: Christmas Island/Kiritimati, Kiribati, Line Islands
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We visited Kiritimati in April and June 2018. We found good holding in sand 50-60′ of water just NW of the copra pier, but the bottom is patchy – it was helpful to have good light when anchoring to find the sand patch.
We agree that anchoring in 30′ of water is probably pushing it in terms of swell. The anchorage off the village/Oil depot is more sheltered from swell (especially S swell) than the anchorage at the pier, but easier to get on and off the island at the pier.
Timei & Tima at Rainbow Enterprise (also called Lagoon View Hotel) were very helpful in arranging transport for us, as well as tracking down various government officials when we were trying to clear out and they were not in their offices.
It would be do-able to enter the lagoon and go to the London small boat harbor with a shallow draft vessel in the conditions we encountered (with good light and careful pilotage), but weather was fairly mellow during our visit.
Most of the shoreline would be tough to a beach a soft-bottomed dinghy on due to shallow coral, so we used the KPA pier and ladder to get on and off the island.
Updates Dec 2017:
– Timei & Tima are still around and still very helpful with all matters that may arise. They are now listening only on VHF Ch 67
– Marine Radio Christmas Island (Ch 16) seems to be operational only weekdays during business hours after 9 am
– The authorities were really friendly and good-humoured. They wanted to be picked up from the beach facing the outside anchorage in very calm conditions, but still with a two to three-foot swell. For the five(!!!!!) of them, we made two trips each way, they all got soaking wet and took it with a laugh.
– The ladder on the north side of the commercial pier is freshly painted but missing a few steps at the bottom. It’s doable if you have good footing and are not afraid of heights.
– The island now has cell phone service and SIM cards are available for $3 – weekly data from $5. The net, however, is really slow and erratic – it only becomes usable late at night and early mornings.
– We might have been here at a bad time weather wise, but make sure to anchor well offshore. I’d say 10 meters of depth is pushing your luck unnecessarily. The wreck of a Beneteau 50, which is now a monument in front of Timei’s guesthouse, is a good reminder. Swell picked up and beached the yacht while the crew was ashore.
– Anchoring inside the lagoon is no option in the conditions we encountered – unless you are a very, very shallow draft catamaran (maybe). The surveys are outdated and shifting sandbars are hidden by milky waters, stirred up by gusty winds, cross seas and tidal currents. We only draw 3 feet with the centre blade up but didn’t even consider for a moment to chance to go all the way around into the small boat harbour east of London, which is the only good place inside. In the deeper parts of the lagoon we still had rollers from the sea (occasionally breaking) and a surprisingly high wind wave against it – very uncomfortable.
– Going into the small boat harbour by dinghy is a long and wet ride if the winds are up. Also, make sure to watch the tidal current in the passage to the lagoon closely! In an outgoing current the ocean swells suddenly start breaking in relatively deep water and can get you into trouble!
Posted on behalf of Alexandre Marques de Azevedo of SY Sargaço from Brazil:
A good tip is to anchor in front of the “copra” harbor and call our friends Timei & Tima (you pronounce it Simei and Sima because of Ti = S).
You can call on channel 23, phone 95093, e-mail timeitima@gmail.com, or just look for them 300 meters northbound from the harbor (they agree to give their contact to all sailors).
They are wonderful people. They run a small hotel business named “Rainbow Enterprise”, but they are very happy to help boat people just for the pleasure to share time together and help people. They helped us very much with the authorities even though it is not their business, and it was very, very helpful. They helped us with the internet, laundry, supermarket etc. I tried to pay for the service but they absolutely did not accept.
Timei & Tima have a kind of generosity and sympathy that we do not find very easily these days.
It is also a good idea to avoid arriving on weekends because the authorities try to charge 100% extra. And bring a “clear out” document (Zarpe) otherwise they will find you. Yes, people are very nice but the authorities are not nice at all!
We really liked a place named Paris!
Enjoy!!!!