Monday, 17 June 2019

Whitehaven to Apostle Bay


So with a few weeks to wait for our sails we pottered around the Whitsunday Islands.  Yes, there are worse places to be stuck, but even so the weather forecasts were quite iffy.  First week at Woodwark Bay it was blowing 30 knots with intermittent drizzle and rain squalls.  Luckily we caught enough rainwater to wash our clothes, leaving the sheets and towels for the next Laundromat trip.
The next few days back in Airlie Beach were mild and sunny so Peter was able to climb the mast, with the help of Brian from Cockatoo, and fix the wind instrument.  Brian also has some good contacts who helped us to get spare parts.  It actually took two trips up the mast, but Peter loved it.  A bike ride, some shopping and appointments, then we were ready to sail away from the noise and lights again. With the first report of two whales in the area, now the race was on to see the first whale of the season. 

Back to Nara Inlet this time, avoiding Macona after our earlier dramas, we met up with Cat-O-Gery to attempt the Whitsunday Cairn bushwalk, a walk we had missed last time here.  As we moored the boat the drizzle, rain and squalls returned, lunch was served and eaten, and still the rain persisted.  Giving up the walk idea again, we sailed back to Border Island, arriving on the mooring just as the next squall hit.  Drenched again!  Next morning proved much more pleasant and we were first up the walk over the saddle in lovely morning sunshine. 

Haslewood Island now has 8 moorings and very well used, so many boats coming and going to Whitehaven Beach.  We did the same and motored over to Whitehaven to walk to the lookout before the crowds arrived.  Peter took the famous G-Spotter aerial and we had enough signal, Optus and Telstra, to video call Dee for her birthday. 
The G-spotter in action!

Choppers galore on Whitehaven

After watching a couple of power boats finding their way between the myriad of sandbars into Hill Inlet, we tried to follow in the dinghy.  The shifting sands and eddies are full on and stingrays are darting everywhere, the most we’ve seen, some were massive.  The inlet is a protected area for shorebirds and a mob of godwits, eastern curlew and pied oystercatchers were feasting on a mud flat near the mangroves.  Fish are abundant and the water so clear you can pick out each species on the sandy bottom.
One cat in Hill Inlet

shifting sands...

With jet boats, cruise boats, planes and helicopters circling all day we decided to sail to a quieter anchorage in Apostle Bay.  It is so beautiful, with a fringing reef, clear water and high cliffs on both sides and so much serenity!  Then the drizzle returned. 

Next morning we motored around to try the Whitsunday Cairn walk again, with clear skies and no wind the water was like glass, our third attempt.  Alas no moorings at the cairn beach, as one was now broken, and with a few power boats fishing along the beach we gave up again.  There’s always next week!

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