Sunday, 9 August 2020

Carnarvon


We really wanted to get into the Fascine, which is a sheltered anchorage and much closer to the town than Teggs. Thanks to Joanne and David of Fremantle Sailing Club, we had a phone number for Jan and Terry who are members of Carnarvon Yacht Club. Jeremy phoned them for advice on entry into the Fascine. The answer was decisive. “Not a chance!” We draw 1.5m and the maximum depth on a high tide is 1.2m. The entrance has silted up and only catamarans and shallow draught boats have been able to get in and out for the last two years.
Sunset at Teggs anchorage
Teggs anchorage is fine in most wind directions. The surrounding sandbanks prevent big swells rolling in, but choppy wind waves can develop at high water. The holding is good. Nearby, a marked and dredged channel leads into the DoT Boat Harbour. It takes us about 15 minutes in the dinghy to a small boat ramp in the harbour, where we can haul out the dinghy and walk for 30 minutes into town. About half way along the road we came to Carnarvon Yacht Club and met John. He gave us lots of information about the Fascine and Carnarvon. He said we could use their washing machines and showers. The DoT harbour has uninviting ablutions with cold showers and no laundry facilities.
Waiting for the laundry at Coral Coast Tourist Park

Soon after our arrival we needed to do our laundry, fill a cooking gas bottle and buy food for a few days. Jeremy had the great idea of taking the dinghy into the Fascine. It was about half tide on a fairly calm day. We touched the bottom with the outboard at one point and crossed breaking waves on the bar to reach the deeper water beyond. About 30 minutes after leaving Sal Darago we chained and padlocked the dinghy to one of the pontoons along the Fascine.

 

Mangrove beach near Teggs channel


I had found out that Coral Coast Tourist Park had washing machines and dryers and also filled gas bottles. Jeremy phoned and asked if we could use their facilities. No problem. They were very friendly and helpful. Afterwards, we carried a full gas bottle and two bags of laundry back to the dinghy. The tide had gone out revealing sandbanks in various places, so we motored to a small boat ramp and hauled out the dinghy. Fortunately, our dinghy has wheels, but it was still a hard ten minute pull along the road to the small boat ramp in the DoT boat harbour.


We believe there is a bus around town, but not out to the boat harbour. There are taxis and when we had heavy shopping to carry, we used one.
SD before power washing

Located in the boat harbour is Pickles Point Seafood and Boatyard run by Bruce and Gail. Bruce agreed to haul us out so that Jeremy could renew the antifoul paint on SD’s bottom. We arranged to hire a car from Avis to make provisioning and general running around easier.


SD washed,sanded and undercoated. Avis hire car

 We also contacted Andrew, who is an officer in the Australian Border Force. We made two appointments: first, to extend our Control Permit (this is similar to a cruising permit and has to be extended every twelve months up to a maximum of three years and second, to clear out of Australia. Since we hoped to stop at Cocos (Keeling) which is part of the Australian Indian Ocean Territories (IOT), we had to obtain permission from the IOT before we could be cleared out.

New antifoul paint applied

We filled out the required online form and sent emails. Permission was granted, but we

 have to quarantine on the boat for two weeks before we can go ashore. However, we

 understand that food, water and diesel can be brought to the boat.


Next, we emailed the harbour master at La Reunion and were given permission to berth in Le Port. As Reunion is a department of France, we are accepted as European citizens. No-one seems to know what will happen to boats (and crew) that are in Europe after 31st December.
Inside the Apollo 11 capsule

All being well, we leave on 28th August and start a 3,700 nautical mile passage across

 the Indian Ocean which will bring us closer to home.

The OTC dish at Carnarvon Space and Technology Museum


With most jobs done, we were ready to launch. Unfortunately, no-one told the weather and a gale warning was issued for our area. Bruce very kindly agreed to postpone our launch and we sat out the gale in the boatyard.
Carnarvon from the OTC dish


We had the opportunity for a day off so we extended the car hire and visited Carnarvon’s number one attraction, the excellent Space and Technology Museum. Here we had a trip in an Apollo capsule and had our photo taken on the Moon! It’s a great place showcasing Carnarvon’s role in tracking NASA’s Mercury, Gemini, Apollo and Skylab missions.
Guess where we are?

Now that we’re back on Earth and the gale is easing, we think we’ll be on the water tomorrow. We’re still waiting for the parcels from the UK. The letters have arrived. I have to contact a dentist and have my broken tooth fixed.

I'm using Blogger's new interface. Think I prefer the old one. 

5 comments:

Hilary said...

Hi Jeremy and Kathy another interesting read. Can’t imagine how you provision for such a long sea voyage! We are sitting on our mooring at Ramsholt enjoying the sunset after another warm day, we’ve spent a lovely couple of days with Bill and Brenda. Hope the weather is kind for you, keep safe. Looking forward to your next blog in a while!!

Jeremy and Kathy said...

Thank you Hilary for your comments. Fortunately the First Mate is excellent at provisioning. Unfortunately permission to stop at Islands along the way is not going so well and Covid is taking off again in La RĂ©union. Enjoy Ramsholt- look out for Sea Rose, our daughter's Southerly - and keep safe and well.

Hilary said...

Lovely to hear from you, it’s magic isn’t it compared to snail mail of yesteryear! Do hope you are able to make your island stops and go ashore. The trouble is the quarantine
rules seem to change frequently tho obviously you’ll be extreme social distancing, hope officials recognise that!! Take care, keep safe

John and Eilidh said...

Hi Jeremy and Kathy,Really do hope all goes well with the next stage of your epic passage across the Indian Ocean,Richie was saying that you wouldn't be allowed ashore in the Cocos Islands,which i think you had on your itinerary?Western Australia sounds very nice ,not a place you hear so much about so enjoying your Blog.All very quiet on Argyll Terrace now that all the Spencer's have departed. Gavin, Eileen Julian Helen and there lovely families had really good weather, up to 30c at times,but Emily Ben and family the weather not so good. sad to see them go, we very much enjoy them being here, so all the best and hoping you get away soon, Love from us x

Jeremy and Kathy said...

Hi John and Eilidh. Thank you for the comment. It is good to hear from you.
Not being able to stop at Cocos Keeling is a blow and now the cases of Covid on La RĂ©union have gone from single figures to 70+. It's making a decision to leave very difficult.
We are sorry that all the Spencers have gone home. Kathy and I would have loved to be in Tobermory this year. Still it was good that Gavin and his family were there and had great weather.
We've been reading about storm Ellen...not so good!
Keep safe and well. Love Jeremy and Kathy. XX