2012 ended up being the antithesis of 2011. We
continually had storms coming up the coast from the lows that were centred in
the Tasman Sea. You would look at the map of Australia and you would see a low
over Sydney/Melbourne, one over Adelaide and another over Perth. So they would
deliver three to six days of really windy and ugly weather. After this it would
die down for two to three days of perfect weather, and this is when we made
passage to the next destination and before the next low made it to the east
coast of Australia. This weather situation followed us from Sydney and we were
not finally free from its grip until we passed the Tropic Of Capricorn.
Leaving Brisbane City. |
We stopped overnight at Noosa Beach and then it was a
quick sail up to Wide Bay, south of Fraser Island. We had arrived at the
perfect time it would seem - calm water and midday on a bright sunny day. We
could not see the daytime light leads so we followed our chart plotter to the
letter to find the deepest channel across the shallow bar. It wasn't until we
were committed that we realised that something was deeply wrong. The waves were
standing up signalling that it was very shallow water. I suggested to Peter
that we turn around immediately but as he pointed out we would take numerous
large waves over the side, which could potentially sink the boat. So over the
bar we went.
The waves got bigger and the boat was tossed around in
what felt like a washing machine. The waves flooded into the cockpit and
everything here, cushions and books, was swimming around on the floor. I
scrambled around trying to close the hatch as quick as possible with one hand,
as letting go would mean falling.
Meanwhile, Peter was madly trying to keep the bow into
the waves to prevent us from being swamped and going under. The waves smashed
into him and he nearly lost his grip on the wheel several times. During this
time the keel just kept smashing into the sand below, each and every trough. We
were bobbing around like a cork. The feeling it gives you is nauseating. You
know the keel is tough but if it breaks the boat will turn upside down and you
cannot help thinking of this every time it would hit the bottom. The crossing
took about 20 minutes but it felt like an hour. We were utterly exhausted and
shaking uncontrollably after crossing this bar (well I was). Later we were
enlightened that it had the reputation of being the worst bar on the east coast
of Australia. Great, our first bar crossing and we had to pick the worst. They
don't call it "the mad mile" for nothing.
More bad weather was upon us but we were safe and snug up
the river at lovely Tin Can Bay. Feeding 'Mystique' the local dolphin was a
highlight. We met our now good friends, Patrick and Marie from 'Gael Force', at
the yacht club. As we found out our chart plotter software was last year's
model and was out of date for the quickly shifting sands of Wide Bay Bar and
behind Fraser Island. Luckily for us Patrick and Marie had an up to date one,
so we closely followed them safely through the shallow 'Sheridan Flats'. At one
stage we had only 400mm below our keel. Sharing meals and sightseeing Fraser
Island with them was great fun. But after Fraser Island we went to Gladstone,
while they continued to Yeppoon, to refuel, provision and to have my tooth
refilled (yuk!!!).
Coming into Great Keppel Island - just on dusk. |
Arriving at beautiful and safe Port Clinton. |
After having dinner Peter checked the depth of the
position the marina staff had allocated us. After rechecking his calculations
he realised that at low tide later that night we would only have 100mm of water
under our keel. Worse still, every night after that it would get shallower.
This would see us take out the wharf and the catamaran beside us the next
evening. So after speaking to the security guard we moved into the deeper water
berths, usually reserved for the super-yachts (boy, do some people have too
much money). When going to the office the next morning to pay they were annoyed
that we were in this section and suggested a third move. Peter nicely pointed
out all the stuff ups that had occurred and the fact that we could not contact
their on-call staff the previous night to reassign another berth. So in their
wisdom they decided to leave us there for the rest of the week, bless their
hearts.
Peter, Denise, Frannie and KT. |
KT, Frannie and David - on way back to Airlie. |
Wendy, Richard, Denise and Peter. |
Over 100 boats attended. |
These parties usually started at 10am and with most people going back to their boats by about 10pm. After 5 days of this regime Peter and I were absolutely 'shagged' (excuse the pun). We said goodbye to our new friends as they went north to Bowen and then onto Cairns. We chaperoned them to Bowen, only a short half day sail away and then returned to Gloucester Island for some much needed rest and recreation. This was a popular choice as some other shaggers obviously had the same idea. There was the usual knock on the hull and the invite for an impromptu lunch on the island for 20 of us, which helped fill in the lazy days.
Pirate party - Peter with other pirates. |
These parties usually started at 10am and with most people going back to their boats by about 10pm. After 5 days of this regime Peter and I were absolutely 'shagged' (excuse the pun). We said goodbye to our new friends as they went north to Bowen and then onto Cairns. We chaperoned them to Bowen, only a short half day sail away and then returned to Gloucester Island for some much needed rest and recreation. This was a popular choice as some other shaggers obviously had the same idea. There was the usual knock on the hull and the invite for an impromptu lunch on the island for 20 of us, which helped fill in the lazy days.
Beautiful Shaw Island. |
Peter and Richard - full after eating fresh oysters off the rocks. |
At Hook Island we met another new friend, Richard from 'Sail La Vie'. Richard was sailing south to Brisbane as well, so we teamed up with him. As per usual for 2012 the lows were ever present off the south coast of Australia. As usual giving us days where we had to shelter behind islands and then pleasant days when the weather passed, and we managed to make passage south again. It was nice to have Richard with us on the rest days to spend time swimming, bushwalking, beachcombing and fishing.
The biggest and best highlight of the whole trip was the last island. We arrived at South Percy Island late afternoon to find ourselves alone in the anchorage. Richard had decided to stay at Middle Percy Island for the night. To our delight two whales also decided the anchorage was to their liking, and they were swimming around the boat. We watched them up on the deck for ages until it was too dark to see them. Later we went to bed and listened to them through the steel hull, singing to each other.
All too soon it was the end of the season and we headed
south to Brisbane to wait out the northern cyclone season. We would get work,
visit family and friends and drive down to Sydney for Christmas.
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