In this episode, we talk about a “travel the world” experience that’s powered by people as much as by places: a deluxe freighter voyage aboard Aranui 5 (and the Aranoa), seen through the eyes of an onboard guide. If you want expert help turning a dream voyage in French Polynesia into a plan that’s easy to execute, visit https://farandawayadventures.com. Normand interviews Spencer Hata Utuya to understand how these voyages are created day by day—and why flexibility is part of what makes them real.
Spencer’s story begins with a surprising detail: he didn’t grow into guiding through traditional tourism training. He studied business management and marketing and expected a different career path. After being rejected from leadership roles due to lack of experience, he found a guide position onboard the ship and started in September 2022. By late 2025, he had learned what “world travel” often teaches the fastest: you don’t master a destination by memorizing a brochure—you master it through humility, repetition, and real interaction with the people and places that define it.
One of the strongest themes is preparation as respect. Spencer shares that early on, he realized travelers sometimes knew more than he did about French Polynesia’s islands and history. That could have been discouraging, but for him it became motivation to study deeply and continuously. He describes reading and reviewing his notes every evening so he can deliver the best version of each island story. Even when he knows the material, reviewing it keeps him sharp. It also keeps him ready when guide assignments change unexpectedly—if a colleague is sick, hurt, or dealing with a personal challenge, the team reshuffles, and the prepared guide can step in without compromising the guest experience.
The episode also offers a rare look at how remote itineraries are actually handled. Spencer explains that the next voyage’s program begins being drafted during the current voyage, often in the final days before arriving back at the end. The team lays out the structure—daily schedule, included and optional excursions, connections—but they intentionally leave room for adjustments because changes can come from local communities, contractors, tourism offices, or island organizations.
Two stories bring that reality to life. On a Marquesas sailing, a dance performance was expected but didn’t happen because of a family situation among the performers. Spencer describes how that affects logistics and guest mood, and how guides manage the moment respectfully while keeping guests engaged. On an Australs sailing, a bus tour ran into a chain of problems: a bus ran out of gas, a replacement vehicle required a driver to retrieve forgotten keys, and guests waited. Spencer explains how guides turn waiting into learning by walking around, talking about the landscape, and keeping the group connected to the destination rather than to the delay.
Religious calendars can affect who works on which days, so partnerships shift—one cruise might work with one group, another cruise with a different group—based on the schedule. For travelers who truly want to “travel the world,” this is a reminder that the most authentic trips are often collaborative and dynamic.
The conversation closes with practical advice that fits any world traveler visiting remote islands: pack good shoes for hikes, water shoes for coral environments, repellent, and a raincoat for sudden weather changes. Spencer also emphasizes an open mind—Polynesian hospitality can be warm and physically friendly, and letting your guard down a little helps you experience the destination more deeply. If you want world travel that feels human—where the story is shaped by preparation, relationships, and real-life moments—this Aranui 5 behind-the-scenes episode delivers. For help planning the right voyage, connect with Far and Away Adventures.com and https://farandawayadventures.com.