Tauranga's Rob Gibson has just completed the journey of a lifetime, sailing more than 16,000km from the Caribbean to New Zealand on a 13-metre yacht.
Earlier this year, Mr Gibson, his former boatmaster student, John de Boer, and his son, Stephen de Boer, embarked on the trip to return the Nautonnier yacht they had bought back to New Zealand.
The voyage took the Tauranga man from the British Virgin Islands to Puerto Rico, Cuba, Jamaica, Panama, the Galapagos Islands, the Marquesas Islands and Tahiti before returning to Marsden Cove in Whangarei. The four-month expedition included some of the longest sailing passages possible between two points in the world. Between the Galapagos Islands and the Marquesas Islands in French Polynesia, the crew spent 28 days at sea with no sight of land, clocking more than 6500km of travel in one sitting.
However, Mr Gibson said the biggest challenge arose when the three-man team was cut to two for the final leg of the trip.
Work commitments meant Stephen de Boer had to fly home, leaving the two experienced boaties to tackle a 23-day passage from Tahiti to New Zealand. "I was pretty concerned about it. It's a long way for two people to sail, but we managed to make it okay," said Mr Gibson. "We took turns at steering and keeping watch, four hours on, four hours off."