GirlGI | Girl Gone International GirlGI Issue 3 | Page 29

My husband and I immigrated to New Zealand from the States in the summer of 1975 with our son Rob, then only 3 years old. We chose to travel by freighter aboard the Natko Nodilo, a tramp freighter registered in Communist Yugoslavia carrying ‘unpackaged’ cargo. We were told the trip would be three and half weeks long with two stops, Cape Town and Perth, but found as our adventure progressed that the ship had no regular schedule and loaded and unloaded whenever they were hired to do so. Accommodation & Crew We paid for first class accommodation but what we got was not what we expected. The cabin was the size of a walk-in closet, located in the crews’ quarters and covered with soot. It included a bunk bed, couch, desk, sink and port hole. We shared a bathroom and shower with the crew but dined separately with the other ten passengers on board. Most days we enjoyed large sardines for breakfast and fried fish complete with heads for lunch and dinner. All meals were heavily loaded with garlic. The officers and crew were from former Yugoslavia. They were very friendly and caring towards our 3-year old son. They played soccer with him on the fantail, let him chip off and repaint the deck railings. Sailing South After several unscheduled stops we stopped in the port of Piraeus, Greece where we learned we were going to stop in Africa near Takoradi, Ghana. Luckily, I was aware that malaria was quite prevalent in that area and was able to purchase Quinine in Athens, an antimalarial drug, for my family. When our ship crossed south of the Equator the crew performed a ‘Cross The Line’ ceremony on Rob. During which ‘King Neptune’ came aboard and doused our son with sea water and rewarded him with a candy bar and certificate for bravery. Heading East En-Route to Tasmania we received a message that my husband’s father was dying. Once we reached Hobart in Tasmania, my husband decided to fly home to his father and to meet us in Auckland after we arrived. Fortunately, Rob and I were able to move upstairs to a nicer, more secure cabin with a private bath. After loading up cargo in Hobart, the ship headed east into the open Indian Ocean towards our final destination. Crossing the Tasman Sea Ships traveling in the Tasman Sea of the Southern Hemisphere have strong gale-force winds throughout