Lovina to Kumai Day 3 - Hindsight - entry to Kumai for those who follow

Caduceus
Martin and Elizabeth Bevan
Thu 12 Nov 2015 10:50

Position           02:44.54 S 111.43.94 E

Date                1050 (UTC+8) Thursday 12 November 2015

Distance run    In 22hrs 50mins 140nm over the ground, 138nm though the water

Trip total         418m over the ground, 418m through the water

 

The aim of this 24 hour period was to close the estuary leading to Kumai for first light so that we could navigate the complications of the estuary and river in daylight.  Dodging fishing boats and more tugs and barges in the dark kept the duty watch on their toes as we motored with little or no wind.  The quantity of shipping coming out of the Kumai Estuary indicated that the estuary and river could be exciting.

 

As we approached the depth decreased and joy of joys there was enough wind to be able to sail at 5 knots for a few hours.  Sailing in 14m and shallowing of water brought back happy memories of the Bahamas.  The further into the estuary we sailed the more Bahamas like the depth.  A major issue this year has been dense banks of smog caused by the burning off of the rain forest in order to plant palm oil plantations.  The smog originated in South Borneo and has been a blight over vast areas of South East Asia.  Kumai was particularly badly effected and earlier visitors to Kumai reported visibility down to 50 metres at times.  We go off lightly with only occasional whiffs of burning and a general haze.

 

The various sources of navigational advice, pilots and other cruisers all report that of the electronic charts C-Map is way out and Navionics is not much better.  Our Raymarine kit now allow us to load both systems and it is interesting to display them side by side with a radar overlay to show where the land actually is; always nice to know.

 

Navionics on the left and C-Map 4D on the right. The river entrance and between 1.5 (minimum seen) and 3-4 metres under the keel.  C-Map seems more accurate with better depth definition.  C-Map also recorded buoys which were there but not shown on Navionics

 

The waypoints that we used came from a variety of sources, the sailing vessels Alba and Ocelot and Andy Scott’s Cruising Guide to Indonesia.  Alba’s waypoints that we used primarily were:

 

A1       03:11.21S 111:35.49E

A2       02:58.12S 111:40.58E

A3       02:56.49S 111:41.70E

A4       02:54.26S 111:42.58E

A5       02:53.62S 111:42.16E

A6       02:51.99S 111:43.08E

A7       02:50.69S 111:43.65E

 

then

C8       02:49.323S 111:43.453E

C9       02:48.096S 111:42.148E

C10     02:47.150S 111:42.199E

 

And we anchored at   02:44.535S 111:43.940E, which was opposite Kumai Town and generally out of the way of anchored ships, all of which swung with the tide so required watching carefully.

 

In addition there were buoys shown on C-Map.  We reckon they have been moved slightly, possibly with the move of the sandbanks.  We plotted them from the radar at:

 

Green 1           02:57.507S 111:41.061E

Green 2           02:53.368S 111:42.393E

Red 1              02:51.869S 111:42.788E

 

There are leading lines but we did not use them, relying on the waypoints for our track.  The least depth encountered was 1.5 metres under the keel, i.e. 3.6 metres and we arrived at WP1 at about high tide, so entered against the ebb which we recorded as up to 2 knots.

 

A hazard of the course are fishing nets, some marked with flags or by the presence of their owners and others only spottable at the last moment by a line of small polystyrene floats.  We are not sure how they survive passing ships as they seem to be across the channel and the ships certainly do not have the ability to manoeuvre or do emergency stops and handbrake turns that we do.

 

Fishermen laying nets to catch unwary yachties

 

Navionics to the left and C-Map 4D on the right, showing our anchor position opposite to the town of Kumai.  C-Map in this latest version does appear to have the edge but treat with care

 

In the following photograph the large square buildings without windows are nesting “boxes” for Swifts who provide a harvestable source of bird nests for soup and traditional Chinese treatments.  It puts a whole new meaning onto ‘Twitter’ as they play the swift’s calls throughout the day to attract the birds and keep them happy; not much difference really.

 

Kumai viewed from across the river.

 

Lots of ships at anchor.  It is a busy place and the only reason for our visit was to take a river trip to see the Orangutans of Borneo