BLUE WATER RALLY - AUSTRALIA - DARWIN TO BALI
12.12S 127.18E Saturday 4th October – Nefa put the engine back
together with the help of Paul and the boys but assembling it in place has disturbed
the shaft seal which is now leaking so badly it runs every two minutes.
We have bought a spare bilge pump (which we should carry anyway) in case ours
fails from over use. Not a dangerous situation, just a major irritation
hearing the bilge pump constantly going off…….. Wednesday was a rollercoaster of preparations – food shopping for
five, Customs clearance, collection of the new awning, stowing five
people’s paraphernalia, photocopying all our documents ten times for
Kupang officialdom, changing money for local Indonesian currency and taking the
hire car back to the airport. Then after all that a very sad Teri and Lee
on Glendora (our ‘poddies’ for Kupang and the Spice Islands) came
to tell us that they have inadvertently been missed off the list to go
there! So – all change at the 11th hour – we two
boats are now going to Bali – hopefully stopping off at Ashmore Reef on
route which is meant to be a bit like Beveridge Reef – the one we never
quite got into due to adverse weather conditions………we have
been told there may be illegal immigrants camping on Ashmore hoping to find a
backdoor route into Australia who could cause problems for us; we shall have to
wait and see. We were exhausted by 2100 hrs so all had a wash and brush up
before going out to dinner…..only to find nearly everything resembling an
eatery shuts on the dot of 9.00pm in Thai Restaurant Oscar convening with his Buda…….. If Wednesday was stressful, Thursday brought out the worst in me…..we
hadn’t had time to take the car back after all so Oscar and I set off to
do that at 7.00am – to be back in time for our 9.15am lock
appointment. We were busily disconnecting and tidying up the electrical
line and water hose, refilling the water tanks and preparing for our lock exit,
when Tipperary Marina radioed to say they were ahead of time could we come
through now? Where were Oscar, Vic and Clara? To cut an exasperated story
short, we missed our lock slot, then we missed the second one and by the time
we got through and around to the fuel pumps there were five yachts rafted up in
front of us re-fuelling! Rally yachts rafted up behind the fishing boats Then came another anxious time: the tide (7 metres) was dropping like a
stone and to make matters more difficult our bow thrusters threw a temporary
wobbly (the switch in the cabin had been half knocked) which made it difficult
to raft up next to the fishing boats. Anyhow, Shaula III rafted on to us
and Gaia on to them and at 10.30am we three finally started taking on fuel
(five pumps but only one attendant so only one pipe!) Shaula 3 rafting up beside us By this time we were not alongside the quay any longer, we were 6
metres below, straddling the heavy diesel pipe across three fishing boats to
get to us. Oscar on the fishing boats waiting for the fuel line By the time we had all filled our tanks and containers we had just
fifteen minutes before our keel would hit the sand! So I leapfrogged over the
boats, clambered up the 6 metre metal staircase totally encrusted with
barnacles, ran down the pier, paid by credit card (duty free with the correct
paperwork), waited for the other two to pay, ran back down the quay, clambered
down the steps (cut my hands) –jumped onto the fishing boats now as
the tide was so low they were nowhere near the steps any longer, leapt back on
our boat, freed ourselves from our raft mates, fired up the engine and managed
to get out of the basin via a small channel before the tide hit its lowest
point. Barnacle staircase See how the tide had dropped….. Failure would have meant being stuck for another six hours and missing
the outgoing tide and current which was currently in our
favour………..well we did it with just a foot under the
keel… but poor Clara – her first introduction to sea life - a
blinding panic to get away! Then a wonderful calm – anyone who has sailed oceans will know it
– that wonderful feeling of escape from land pressures…..and we
have run like clockwork. The amazing thing is that the only boat Clara
has ever been in is a pedallo in Fantastic sunsets Glassy seas And peaceful watches……. We have played Rummy Cube and Boggle, Chess and Scrabble, read books,
bantered and laughed so much and chatted for hours and hours catching up on our
year apart; it feels very, very good to be a family again……… |