The strong wind was relentless at Hope Island, blowing constantly
between 22 and 27 knots. At high tide the sea covered the surrounding
reefs and the waves rolled over into the anchorage bouncing Pegasos
around. On the second day we launched the dinghy to walk around the
island. The wind was so strong that Robert secured the dinghy to the
boat with a very long rope in case the dinghy engine died and we
would be blown past the boat out to sea. We beached the dinghy and
walked around the island. All 10 minutes of it. We did another lap.
In good weather this must be a lovely island to snorkel and explore
the surrounding reefs.
After 3 days of bouncing anchorage at Hope Island, we decided to move
on to the security of Cooktown despite the strong wind. The forecast
was strong south easterly wind continuing for at least 2 weeks and no
improvement. According to Meteye it was going to get worse. The
yellow area is 25 to 30 knot wind in our intended area of sailing
north.
We waited for the tide to drop enough to see the submerged reefs and
slowly motored out carefully following our previous inward GPS tracks
between the reefs and Robert put up the front sail. It was no
surprise that we were the only boat at sea other than a strange
looking ship moving past in the shipping channel. It had no AIS
signal so couldn't tell what it is.
It was a hectic sail. The wind remained around 25 to 28 knots and the
swells were very steep and short. The boat rode up and down and the
wind hammered from behind. The hem of the foresail tore loose.
Occasionally a larger swell picked the boat up and pushed us almost
sideways down the swell.
After 3 hours of horrible lurching we reached the mouth of the
Endeavour River into Cooktown. Robert furled the sail and switched on
the engine. We needed to turn to port to enter and took the swells
side on as he manoeuvred the boat to the first set of channel
markers. It was the moment the wind decided to reach 31 knots. The
water was wild! He gunned the engine through the markers as the
swells churned around. Just before the second set of channel markers
a larger swell crashed into the side and shot water into the cockpit.
We could see calmer water at the third set of markers and people
strolling on the headland. Then we were through! What a relief.
The Endeavour River mouth has a large wide sandbank in the middle
which dries at low tide. A variety of boats are moored around the
sides.
We edged our way around other moored boats and found a spot to anchor
near the mangroves. The anchorage here is very shallow and the bottom
of the boat touched mud at 0.9 metres. The Cooktown welcoming
committee was sunning himself on a nearby mudbank a few metres from
the boat. Our first crocodile in the wild close up. We were very
impressed.
The next day we went ashore to explore the small town's facilities.
We found our shore necessities: fuel jetty, refuse bin, laundry,
supermarket, grog shop and a tap for potable water as we can't use
the water maker in this muddy water.
Cooktown has some quaint areas, some shops and restaurants closed up,
and a few lovely old buildings that could do with a spruce up. The
locals are the friendliest and chattiest we have encountered up the
Queensland coast.
The most noticeable feature in Cooktown streets is the predominance
of four-wheel drive vehicles. The town is the last outpost for those
roughing it by driving into remote areas on camping and four-wheel
driving expeditions.
Cooktown owes its origins to Captain Cook establishing a number of
historical firsts in 1770 such as the first place Englishmen spent
more than a few days ashore in Australia and the first sighting of
kangaroos and the first contact with Aborigines. Cooktown milks the
Captain Cook connection, as it should - that someone could achieve
such passages around the reefs with none of today's navigational aids
is absolutely astounding.
That afternoon there was a particularly low tide and we realised just
how shallow we were when the tide went out and Pegasos leaned over
into the mud. It might have been a good opportunity to clean the
underside but the mud is sticky, soft and swallows a whole foot.
Sitting duck for a watchful croc. When the tide came back we moved
closer to the mangroves and Robert put put a second anchor to prevent
further dragging. He thought about tying up to the mangroves as
another boat has done, but watching a crocodile cruising along the
edge of the mangroves is a bit off-putting.
Every morning we looked at the weather forecast and it seems we are
stuck in Cooktown for almost two weeks. Thanks to a very slow moving
high pressure ridge, quite common at this time of the year. Bullets
of wind often rip over the boat causing the boat to shudder and swing
and the covers to flap madly.
There's not much to do in Cooktown and a visit to the James Cook
Museum is a highlight, not only for the artefacts and history of
Cook, but also for the beautiful building that is now preserved for
the museum. It used to be St Mary's Convent with Irish nuns setting
up a school in 1888. That itself is a story of the times and the
school exhibits are equally interesting.
We visited the botanical gardens and did an easy walk to Finch Bay
from the gardens.
After 10 days of non-stop wind, the forecast was for one day of the
wind easing up - our window of opportunity to move on. We topped up
our provisions, diesel, gas and chocolate.
We set off after breakfast for Cape Flattery, about 35 nautical miles
north. We made good time passing Cape Bedford and reached our
anchorage in 6 hours. Just before rounding the Cape we saw the
loading jetty for the silica sand strip-mining operation.
The swells were choppy and our trip was bouncy most of the time but
the anchorage was well protected.
The only sign of life was a group of campers ashore racing along the
beach on a quad bike and four trawlers anchored during the day. The
trawlers leave at night for fishing grounds and return in the morning.
The south easterly wind was back up the next day so Robert planned
our route to Lizard Island along the north side of reefs for swell
protection. Slightly longer but infinitely better than having swells
bash us on the side. We passed Linnet, Martin, Eyrie and Eagle reefs
at low tide so they were clearly visible. Even so, there's not much
to see on them.
The last short stretch was the toughest as we turned round facing
Lizard Island and met the wind and swells head on. Really bouncy and
a few waves splashed water into the cockpit. The wind was pumping and
the engine going hard. Just off the island we saw a pod of dolphins
and the boat shot over a large banded sea snake. The swell dropped as
we reached Mrs Watson's Bay. As luck would have it, a rope came loose
at the back and caught in the propeller, no engine power. Luckily
this didn't happen as we were pushing the engine hard through the
swells. Whew! Robert dived in the warm clear water to cut the rope
free and we moved closer to the shore to anchor next to a reef. A
reef shark swam up to the boat and waved a fin at us.
According to the forecast, it was strong winds for the next 10 days
or so. Well, Lizard Island looks like a great place to sit out the
wind. Warm clear water, sandy beaches, coral reefs and a hiking path
to Cooks Lookout. People spend a fortune to visit the island and stay
at its resort.
The island can only be reached by private boat or small airplane so
it's fairly off the beaten track of most commercial ferry boats. It's
a world class diving site and totally protected by Marine Parks. No
fishing is allowed.
We changed our anchorage spot after a couple of days and we had
hardly put down anchor in the new spot when four reef sharks arrived
and did laps around the boat. We think they are used to getting
scraps off arriving boats.
Underneath our boat was the usual collection of batfish and remora
fish setting up residence.
Snorkeling the reefs in the bay was fantastic - the clearest water we
have experienced in Australia and by far the biggest variety of coral
fish.
When we weren't snorkeling, we had picnic lunch on the sandy beach,
most of the time all to ourselves.
There were three other boats in the bay and we met up with the
skippers of Starchaser and Second Wind for sundowners most evenings
on the beach. Mel and Tony shared their wealth of local knowledge -
very interesting and great stories!
We found the island's fresh water pump not far from the beach.
Delighted to have a chance to rinse off after snorkeling, we took
turns to pump. After the first few pumps, it spewed out a collection
of green frogs at various intervals. Stretching out my bather bottom
to rinse, a green frog popped out the tap, into my held out pants and
out again. Robert thought this was very funny and after my squeal at
having a frog down below, I saw the funny side too. One of the frogs
sat around glaring at us and when we finished it climbed up the pump
and slithered back inside.
We walked along the track that winds over the mangroves, next to the
Pandanus vegetation and through the fynbos-type vegetation to Blue
Lagoon - a very pretty reef enclosed bay.
On the way back we went up Chinamans Ridge for better internet
reception to check the weather forecast. It seems we will be spending
a week here before moving on - what a fabulous break in paradise.
1 comment:
Looks like the most amazing adventure!! Love the underwater pics - enjoy your stop in what looks like paradise and spare a thought for us freezing our bums off this side. Lots of love xxx
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