Oyster Island, Peterson Bay and the tale of two rivers

Caduceus
Martin and Elizabeth Bevan
Fri 31 Oct 2014 23:01

Position           15:22.823S 167:11.660E

Date                1015 (UTC +11) Saturday 11 October 2014

                        To Monday 13 October

 

Distance run – 5.3nm over the ground, 5.4nm through the water

Time from Aesi Island anchorage – 1hr 5mins

 

Peterson Island according to the pilot provides some very secure anchorages.  They are   difficult to get into due to a lack of depth at the pinch points between coral.

 

Confusingly this diagram is East up, North to the left

 

There is however a great outer anchorage, in between A and B on the diagram.  The airfield and surrounding military installations were home to over 100,000 American servicemen during World War II.  The two blue holes that we visited are also marked on the diagram.

 

With not very much in the way of wind we motored the5 miles to join Firefly and Pacific Cool.

 

Whilst in Peterson Bay I made a start on cleaning the hull.  The first tranche was snorkelling which allowed access tote water line and the first metre or so of the underwater growth.  The second tranche was a one tank dive of 90 minutes that cleaned from the bows to the aft end of the keel but not the keel.  The hull had accumulated a great deal of weed and crustaceans which was hard work to remove.

                                                                                                                                           

Caduceus with Firefly behind in the outer south anchorage at Peterson Bay

 

The Oyster Island Resort was closed on Saturday but on Sunday we were able to share a meal there with Paul and Suzie from Firefly and Bill and his son David from Pacific Cool.

 

The entrance to the RiRi River, out of the southern end of the bay, leading to a Blue Hole

 

The RiRi River, beautiful foliage and quite a current

 

 

RiRi blue hole

 

Flora and fauna.  Cattle are big business in Santos with most beef exported to Japan

 

Stunning foliage on the way up the Matevulu River towards the northern of the blue holes

 

The Matevulu blue hole

 

An amphibious shed – the Oyster Island Resort ferry