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Thursday, June 27, 2019

Shorts Days with Short Hop to Seal Rocks

Since we were barely one week beyond the winter solstice - the shortest day of the year, we were endeavouring to keep our day-hops short. From Port Stephens onward, traveling north needed both swell height and the tides to be factored in. In order to access safe harbours such as Laurieton/Camden Haven or Port Macquarie we required low swell, and even then wouldn’t be able to enter any of those destinations until at least 2-3 hours into the making tide. We had already ruled out re-visiting Forster -Tuncurry. The tidal rip there making anchoring, with a decent rode paid out, very awkward and the mini-jetties, we found last time, a nightmare to lasso.  Laurieton was our target to sit out 3 days of northerlies.

 
Our anchorage at Wanda Beach was great for southerly conditions.

Departing Wanda Beach heading for the exit/entrance to Port Stephens.

We were just one of 3 boats heading out.
 
On the solstice, sunset was 4:48pm so with the shortened days we planned to leave Port Stephens and 'steal a base" by anchoring at Broughton Island. It offers a good range of anchorages. However when it came to it, the Bloke decided that we'd continue on a bit further to Seal Rocks. Why pull up at midday when we could keep going for another 3 hours? Although known to be swell prone, we thought we might get a bit of kip there before moving on.

We rather liked the look of Seal Rocks. The holding was excellent in sand and the anchor snatched in very positively. We imagine that it must be a popular spot in the summer.

The swell does sneak in through this gap,  but less so at low tide.

Definitely a gently shoaling surge beach at the throat of the bay.




Cheerful bird outside the laundry at Nelson Bay marina.


Saturday, June 15, 2019

Fish and Chips at Patonga

Passion for Fish and Chips means the Bloke is frequently making destination plans around the availability of such treats on a Friday. He eagerly seeks them out as a reward for good deeds done during the week. Since our intention was to rendezvous with Southern Belle for one last weekend before heading away from Pittwater northbound, a Friday Lunchtime Fish and Chip prospect emerged at Patonga.

The Patonga Pub
 
We’d never gone across to the northern shores of Broken Bay and the tending northerly weather pattern fitted in with the Bloke's scheme. The Patonga Pub is highly regarded as a destination and to further encourage visitors using a water approach, they have 2 courtesy moorings. First come, first served. No bookings are required although anchoring is also a viable option.


The Patonga Pub has been renovated and upgraded to a very high standard and it’s not hard to imagine that it would be heaving with patrons during the summer. It was still doing a brisk trade on this chilly June afternoon. Our flathead and chips ‘hit the spot’ and required a walk around the historic village of Patonga to help ease it down before returning to the boat.


 
The old school house


Wednesday, June 12, 2019

A Lucky Swap’N’Go

“Use it or loose it” is a common enough saying but when it comes it plays out in wicked ways. Leaving the boat unattended in a marina is asking for trouble so returning from a month away visiting the family on both sides of the continent (by plane) left us very exposed. What woukd we discover this time?

OK so the front heads looked like the joker valve may have been a bit leaky. We’ll swap it out with a spare to stop ‘back leakage’. On the face of it, Zofia was pretty clean. The waterline couldn’t be described as a scum line. Topsides weren’t covered in bird poop. So far so good. 

Waiting first pick-up with Coles crossed off the list.
A day spent re-provisioning with the help of cruising friends George and Gail (SV Southern Belle) saw an efficient conversion of $1,000 to a pile of goods. 

Now to stow it all away - groan!
We were feeling pretty pleased with ourselves. We planed to cast off the lines on Wednesday after a water top up and last minute wash. Fuel could be obtained at RMYC en route to Coasters retreat. Phew, how good would that be?

The Bloke fired up the motor. Looking good. Switching on the navigation equipment however delivered a different message. “Computer says NO!” Our Raymarine C80 Chartplotter has been a bit temperamental, occasionally displaying white lines and ‘snow’. No amount of rubbing, squeezing or blowing with compressed air would make a difference. B U G G E R! We’ve already costed the replacement of our original and ‘now superseded’ system. I’ll say it fast ~ $15K . Youch.

It does rather pay off to get to know your neighbours. The Bloke took no time befriending Jon and Prue from a larger Jeanneau further up the jetty before we’d even abandoned Zofia to her deterioration. Over sundowners he’d learned that they were up for significant rewiring after a nearby boat took a direct lightening strike. Their own boat was in the highly charged fallout zone. A Raymarine technician was on our jetty attending to their boat at the very moment we discovered that the computer said “NO”. After obtaining permission to speak with Prue’s technician, it turns out that our C80 problem was quite common. Who knew? We could wait until next week for their electrical guy to take a look and fix ours or we could Swap’N’Go with a reconditioned one they happened to to have at the workshop. 

 
Testing all the input signals - the radar sweep in purple. 

Aquatronics took our old display back to base, transferred our waypoints and returned with the replacement. There were only a few settings to reinstate via the Presentation/Chart layers menu:-
  • - Radar. ON
  • - AIS layer ON
  • -Baud rate adjustment for the AIS display because our AIS is a Simrad via the System setup/ System integration menu.
  • NMEA port settings value = AIS 38400
Happy Days are here again. From the look of it: Job done!

You don’t get much luckier than that and $325 sounds soooo much better than $15,000. And better still, just a 2 hour turn around and we were on our way! 
Michael
Aquatronics Marine
Mobile: +61 418 441 140 
Office Tel: +61 2 9905 5655
Michael@aquatronics.com.au
www.aquatronics.com.au