Sunday, November 14, 2010

Brisbane to Sydney

Update to blog, November 2010. Blackwattle Bay, Port Jackson (Sydney) Australia.

It's been a great start to the Austral summer so far. No expensive boats damaged, by me, one saved from the reef, and nobody hurt beyond reef infections and sunburn.

Yes long distance cruising in sailboats is all about going to exotic places, like Scarborough Australia and working on your sailboat. Have you ever seen such a great alignment on the prop shaft as this one in Scarborough?






So I spent the time and money to paint the bottom, zincs, get the running rigging working again, polish the prop, work work work as required. But all in all the 6 months in the hard over the Aussie “winter” was very good on Prism and she was into the water and sailing in pretty good time. And everything seemed to work well.



It was off to Mooloolaba after that, a great spot to sail the Tasman, and I saw humpback whales there, too fleetingly to get the photos though, so you just get my word for it, as well as Shane Holmes, a helicopter pilot from Mooloolaba. After sailing he and his lovely Brenda took me out for drinks and dinner at the Surf Club.

Then it was off sailing, I managed to 'pick up' a young guy from Brisbane as crew, with his help I planned to take Prism outside Moreton Island on course Southport. The last evening in Mooloolaba, I shared some wine with the elder sailor, Alan, and he was going to Southport but by the inside, anchoring at St Helena Island. He marked some good anchorages on my cruising guide.







An early departure and we stopped at Flinders Reef en route for some great snorkeling in warm waters with lots of fish and turtles. Young Matt of Brisbane wouldn't swim there, however. The Aussie Marine Rescue group of volunteers likes to keep track of us amateurs by sail plan and I heard Alan call in a few hours behind us, he was also coming the outside route, the long way with no anchorages and he was single handing, and he is even more mature than I. At least I had young Matt who was over his seasickness and was now turning into a good helmsman. The wind was warm and gentle and we sailed close to her. Darkness fell soon after Pt Lookout and the unlit nasty looking Flat Rocks. Jagged high rocks are bad enough to see, but Flat Rocks barely stick out of the ocean and with no light on them, and with them in the way, and far off Pt Lookout, I was happy to get past in the last daylight and on my way for Southport, about 5 hours south. But a couple of hours into dark, and the Marine Rescue group is calling Alan on his yacht and he is in trouble. Couldn't hear Alan's side of the radio but we turned around and headed north and sure enough he had run her up on Alt Rocks. The wind and tide pushed him in there and she was on pretty high and dry. His speed and the flatness of the rocks, he was well up there as the morning light showed.









He had got rescued by the helicopter, it landed on the rocks and after a night hove to, me and Matt hoped to be of some help in the rescue, maybe even save her ourselves, earn cash rewards and fame and tons of Brisbane Babes. Matt being from Brisbane and all. She wasn't steel, but fibreglass and she might have been holed already, too hard to see, but the waves were coming in pretty furious for a calm sea and the afternoon tide was the best time to get her off. The commercial salvage guys came and we put the long line to her and each wave lifted the bilge and pulled her towards the big 'Suki engine, if she wasn't holed by the grounding, she was now.

The salvors threw me and Matt onto her as she came under tow, with a 10 HP gas pump, she was taking on water, so me and Matt got that pump and hoses put together and the pump making noise and we started sucking water out of the bilge. I got no photos of that part, we were too busy sucking water.

But that was the end of it for us, they transferred us back to Prism at anchor at the Flat Rocks and Matt and I continued onto the bar at Southport. Thank goodness it was an easy crossing, I came to realize that easy crossing of bars on this coast are kind of rare. We motored down to the heart of Southport town and tied up to a bar and drank some beer and stayed tied up to the bar all night. Alan later called to thank me for my help and to enquire about my reef wounds, every time you get smacked onto a South Pacific reef, you get septic wounds for a week or two. Thanks Alan, I am healed now.

Young Matt was pretty good help and he might get a job with the salvors, they always look for young strong guys from Brisbane. But he wouldn't swim in the Aussie waters, too afraid of sharks. He left me on the Flat Rocks and went back to anchored Prism and he couldn't tie up the zodiac. It got free and drifted away. I shouted at him from the Flat Rocks, Swim, you Aussie pussy, swim. But no, he wouldn't, so I swam to anchored Prism shouting all the way, you Aussie Pussy, don't make me swim all the way out there to rescue that Zodiac that you couldn't tye up, you Aussie Pussy and me an old friggin' Canadian and all, you young Aussie Pussy, etc etc etc, you probably get the idea. Ya just gotta get over that fear of Sharks, Matt. It's like fear of flying in helicopters, get over it.

Matt left me in Southport and I got new crew, but she had to go to Brisbane for a couple of days, which suited me since I wanted to go to Tripplers Pass and anchor where you could walk across South Stradbroke Island and go surfing on the outside. Perfect, a snug anchorage and surfing a short walk away. I got there late in the afternoon and went ashore at dark. They had a big galla galla doo at some bar and I melded in and got two free beers. Then I went for a walk to the surf beach, in the pitch dark and scare the poop outa me, a kangaroo comes bounding across my path. My first sighting of a wild kangaroo in Australia. Neat-o. The surf beach was pretty neat in the dark and I walked back to Prism. I should mention here that Queensland, a state of Australia, like Saskatchewan, does not believe in daylight savings time, so darkness falls at 1800 and dawn comes at 0400. Apparently in both places the cows are adversely affected by DST.






Next day I started my daytime explorations at the place where I got the free beer the night before, as you would, and there was the “wild kangaroos” that I saw the night before. They were tame wallabies, a kangaroo relative, but kept by the bar for Chinese and Japanese tourists to feed. Well, I still hope to see a wild kangaroo someday.

There was no surfing, I couldn't find a board and the surf had no break and I was pretty tired from saving Alan's boat, so I spent my time laying in the shade and listening to the surf. I also got free drinks from a houseboat on holiday, just had to regale them with crossing the Pacific stories.






Then Karina from Darwin came back from Brisbane and we made plans to leave the next morning early for passage to Port Stephens. Her friends were there and she was going to get back onto their boat. We didn't get away as early as I wanted, we ended up hitting the Southport Bar after slack and with the ebb. Well doesn't that Tasman Swell build up nice and swell on the contrary ebb tide? We took two nasty waves green over the bow before we ducked quick past the south breakwater into the normal swells in the 6 meter deep water, scary but nothing like the breakers in the bar. Likewise, I got no photos of that adventure, I was too busy navigating green breakers.

If you want to learn how to sail, the Tasman is great for that. One minute the wind is hard on the nose, next she is off the beam, then behind, then in front. Up the full main, now reef, now another reef, put the genny on a pole, now gybe the genny and the pole, gybe the main, put them all away and start the engine. Etc etc etc. It was a lot of work and before Port Stephens we put into the Clarence River Bar, on the flood tide I can well assure you. We put in on account of a forecast southerly. But it never came and so the next day, on the early AM flood, I wanted to leave, thinking that the southerly had come and gone and was a non event. We came out the flood tide fine, and then the weather hit hard from the south and the tide turned to ebb, so the bar was closed, so there was nothing to do but ride the weather out for, well, 22 hours.

Poor Karina got pretty seasick, me and Prism did nothing in southerly mileage and at 0200 we were back abeam Clarence River Bar. At dawn, Karina got up and said are we at Coffs Harbour? No, we are back were we started 22 hours ago. I took us to the marina and actually paid for moorage, expecting her to quit the boat and nasty blog me for taking her out into stupid conditions, but she wandered the town and had a lunch and some more food, and some more, and she was actually ready to go the next day. So another dawn departure on the flood tide, and a great following sea and wind almost all the way to Port Stephens. We saw more whales at Seal Rocks but they couldn't be caught for all our sailing after them. Lots of dolphins. So we got to Port Stephens just after dark and lined up on the sector light, in the red sector so I was just explaining to Karina how to steer in on the sector light, and I looked up and it had disappeared. Odd, all the other village lights and a red light are there. Called up Marine Rescue, and the batteries are too expensive to replace so the light only works in daylight hours. Well, into the harbour on radar and GPS, no problem and sure enough in the morning, there was the sector light burning bright.

So we left Port Stephens, Karina decided to make the journey to Sydney, and the wind blew pretty good and we came to the entrance to Port Jackson at dawn. Well, what an exciting arrival. Sydney has a great harbour with Port Jackson, big wide entrance ringed in cliffs, lots of ferries zooming all over the place and other boats too numerous to mention. Then you come around the corner with the National Harbour Park on one shore and the Opera House, downtown and the Harbour Bridge before you on t'other shore. We sailed by the Opera House, and I felt another moment of 'I Have Crossed the Pacific'. I had a moment or two of that in Brisbane. I don't know if I am cheating by having too many major milestone achievement moments for the same ocean, but I am taking them as given.

So I called my mom, and I took the photo's, Karina took a lot of photos, her being from this down under and all. She was pretty excited about the Harbour Bridge but to tell the truth, it looks big and chunky to me compared to the Golden Gate. I can't imagine I shall ever see a bridge as lovely at the Golden Gate, it being on t'other side of the Pacific, which I have crossed (excuse me whilst I have that moment once again).

But the Opera House, it is really spectacular to look at and later this week I have every intention of going there and riding my bike all around. The cove just beside is completely ringed by the Royal Botanical Gardens. I have every intention of taking my Zodiac ashore at the Opera House, with pedal bike and exploring the downtown of Sydney. I might even splurge and buy a ticket to walk across the bridge.

Right now I am anchored in Clontarf, a northern suburb in the Middle Harbour. Not a bad anchorage, lots of people passing to and fro on the Middle Harbour. Lots of swimming going on, I will be having a swim myself after breakfast. Then I shall take the zodiac up the middle harbour to investigate two possible mooring buoys for Prism. I am leaning towards Cronulla a village down south on Port Hacking. The southern suburbs of Sydney reach there, as does the rapid transit train, and it is close to Camden where I will be working sometime after Nov 20. The price is more reasonable and it is available, unlike a lot of mooring buoys in Sydney. The Sydney harbour is much better taken as a cruising grounds and anchorage rather than a mooring place. Great anchorages and tons to explore and you can anchor right beside the iconic Opera House and Royal Botanical Gardens, so why pay extra for storage when you can cruise such wonders for free? I am storing Prism on the mooring, since the job entails travel to various helicopter fire fighting locations and they pay expenses and such. I get time off and that's when I want to cruise Sydney. But even Port Hacking should be good cruising, the southern shores are the Royal National Park, the second national park in the history of the universe, the first in Australia. It has lots of interesting stuff to see and will be about a long zodiac ride from moored Prism. Or I can patiently work the tides and take Prism up the Hacking River deep into the Royal National Park.

Right now, the wind is gentle and cool, the water is clear, warm and inviting, the zodiac is all kitted out for exploration and I have to get away from this computer. I now have 'net access from Prism, I bought a nice USB prepaid and so I will be downloading lots of cruising information and photos since it came with 2 Gig of 30 day expiry data. After that it's just a simple email system. So now I have to be careful that I don't spend 2 or 3 hours a day in paradise on the 'net. So you got the latest in news and pretty soon I will report from Cronulla (rhymes with granola).




Monday, October 11, 2010

Back to Australia

I have just updated my emergency contacts info for my emergency locator beacon on Island Prism and you are all listed as my emergency contacts.

That means that if my beacon goes off then they will call you right away to tell you that my beacon is going off. Then they will ask if me and my boat and my beacon are in the general area of where the beacon has gone off. So if I am sailing to Sydney, say, two weeks from now and the beacon goes off they will ask if I was sailing around Sydney. When you confirm that I was sailing around Sydney then they will believe this is not a false alarm and they will come looking for me.

My beacon has a built in GPS and it will transmit its exact location so my rescue should be swift and easy, as long as I am still close to the beacon and have not been eaten by sharks or abducted by aliens.

I will send emails to you guys when I leave port and set out on a sailing adventure. As it stands right now, I hope to be finished the work on Prism before Oct 24th and put her into the water then and start adventuring down the Australian coast towards Sydney. Most likely my greatest problem will be all those freighters, there seem to be an awful lot on that coast.

Ok guys, thanks for letting me use your phone numbers on the contact lists, hopefully they will never call you.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

North Island of New Zealand Circumnavigation

The year 2009 was pretty busy for me, perhaps like all the other non-lottery winners out there. I worked in Afghanistan and Canada and got enough money to pay past cruising debts, present boat repairs and future cruising adventures. Such as sailing around the North Island of New Zealand with Andrea England, lovely and eager to learn Andrea, my grade 5 English teacher.


I had enough to keep me busy when I arrived in Auckland on November 15th, I had to fix this and that, paint here and there, Prism went up on the hard for a week of bottom repairs. There were shakedown sails, and we managed a Rum Race on a Friday. Our position was that we did finish, and the handicap that we got put us generously only 5 minutes in last. In actual time we were at least one hour behind the second to last, but what a great time we had, and then we got lots of Mount Gay Rum drinks for only 5 New Zealand bucks each. A great time was had!

So that left Andrea and I by ourselves with Prism ready to sail and what a great wind out of the SW we had to blow us north from Auckland. First night was Kawau Island and next morning we explored the Governor's Mansion. He was so proud of the various plants and animals he imported to New Zealand, now the poor Island nation is overrun with various imported pests and weeds. Then we left Kawau behind in another great day of SW wind, but not before Andrea spotted feeding seabirds and she guided me to a nice Kingfish. A type of tuna, very white delicious fish. And we saw a Minke whale off Bream Head and then just at dark we sailed into Tutukaka, my favorite port on the North East of New Zealand.

We were in Tut's for 3 or 4 days, and almost every day we sailed out to Poor Knights Island to snorkel with the bazillion fish in the Marine Reserve. A year ago I asked my brother for a new snorkelling Pentax for Christmas and he petitioned the siblings and they pooled and got me one. Finally I am able to send photos taken of the bazillion fish. Lots of people pay lots of money to dive the Poor Knights, but we snorkelled for free and we saw a bazillion fish. Snorkelling the Poor Knights is one of the big time adventures of New Zealand. Captain Cook named the Poor Knights after an english dessert that was green and red, at Christmas time the Pohutukawa Tree that covers the islands is in full bloom with its generous red flower.




Christmas day found us at Cape Brett, also named by Cap'n Cook after Admiral Piercy Brett. The island off laying Cape Brett is Piercy Island, it has the world famous in New Zealand Hole-In-The-Rock, and many tourist speedboats come out and zoom through it. Andrea found more feeding seabirds and she caught two more Kingfish, alas below the legal limit, so catch and release.

For Christmas presents Andrea bought me a dive excursion on the Rainbow Warrior and likewise bought her the same. So we got up early and were driven up the coast a bit and we had a great dive. The Rainbow Warrior was sunk by the French in Auckland for protesting the French nuclear tests in the South Pacific and then was refloated and sunk as a dive reef near the Cavalli Islands. What a great dive, we had two separate "penetrations" and explored all inside the wreck. I stuck my head in the blast hole that sunk her, they blew her hull in the same spot for the second sinking. Andrea got all the pictures of the bazillion fish that lived inside the hull nowadays. That was a great dive.


During our lunch break we swam with bottlenose dolphins and that was great too. I felt that I was calling them with my underwater singing, and they did come around to see me, but Andrea thinks they were just looking at the underwater sasquatch. I thought that dolphins were more serious underwater, but they spent a lot of time kissing and playing and chasing fish that it didn't seem they wanted to catch. And watching Andrea and I swimming with and after them.




Then it was time to get some miles done and so we set off into the wind and tacked tacked tacked up the east coast of the North Island. Late the last night of 2009, we anchored off a beach a few miles south of North Cape. Next day was a great sail in sunshine and easy winds as we rounded North Cape and then Cape Reinga. Island Prism left her native Pacific Ocean and sailed into the Tasman Sea. I was immediately impressed with the Tasman Sea swells and after dark they became pretty offensive in size and frequency. Andrea was concerned with the increased seas and winds and so I elected to turn and run back for shelter behind Cape Reinga. Discretion is the better part of valour etc etc. Just before we got back to Spirit Bay it was midnight Dec 31 2009 and from the most northern tiny cove in New Zealand, a shore party let off fireworks. An hour later we anchored in Spirit Bay and opened the bubbly. Spirit Bay is where the Maori said that the dead left New Zealand for the hereafter. I thought I heard voices twice that night.

Next morning, another great morning of sun and wind, we left and headed south on the West Coast of New Zealand. For the next 3 days and nights we sailed with windvane, or autopilot, or sunny afternoons with Andrea at the helm and made good mileage towards Nelson. One calm and quiet morning as I slept after a night of watch, Andrea had the dolphins come to play and she got some great photos of her, Prism and the dolphins in deep blue water.

When we got to Cape Egmont we were 65 miles offshore and a front hit. I didn't feel like losing those miles so we jogged onwards at 3 or 4 knots with the storm trysail on the boom and a reefed staysail. Prism likes those sails when it gets nasty out. The wind vane did a fine job and we sailed towards Nelson at reduced speed. Andrea was not too excited with the rough going and the occasional solid wallop of wave, but she soldiered on and we came to Nelson late at night and had a very happy satisfied sleep.

From Nelson we signed on Andrea's friend Jill and her friend James and we sailed across Tasman Bay to Abel Tasman National Park where we had a great time exploring by zodiac, swimming with seals, catching barracuda (and letting them go), and sailing with dolphins again.



Since Jill and James have left, Andrea and I have had a great sail to Current Basin and then a long motor against the current in French Pass. Andrea was pretty busy steering Prism in the whirlpools. Then we motored to the entrance of Queen Charlotte Sound and here we have been exploring in the footsteps, or sailpaths of Captain James Cook. He loved this sound and we have been to his monument, his cairn and his anchorages. Today we had a rambunctious sail into Picton, the winds were gusting 40 and Andrea had the rails under many times with a double reefed main and a staysail. I was pretty busy handling sails as the wind came from all quadrants and often all quadrants at the same time. We had one crash gybe turn into a tack just before the main crashed. And here we are at this nice marina one bay before Picton, snug as the winds blow very strong out there, enjoying 2 dollar showers that last over 15 minutes. Tomorrow is wine tasting tour, we rent bycycles and tour the wineries of the Marlbourgh Sounds. I am looking forward to getting pretty sloshed on the best Sauvignon Blanc in the world and pedalling my rented byke all over the vineyards.