Cta Brecknock
Position 54:32.69 S
071:54.65 W
Yesterday we came out
of Puerto King and headed down the Cockburn Channel towards the Pacific
Ocean,
with our goal being the Brecknock Channel.
Early in the morning after we had got the boat sailing we made
our way,
winding through the intricate passageway, down the Cockburn. It is difficult to express the vastness of
this area in terms of its cruising aptitude.
Everywhere that you look, hides an inlet, ready to be explored,
most of
which are uncharted. Onboard we have a
“Ruta”, which is a catalogue of drawings put together by Skip, and the
other
skippers of Pelagic. Occasionally, Ruta
information is exchanged with other boating explorers, mixing within
the same
circles. The Ruta information is
incredibly detailed, including soundings, positions of dangers, where
to drop
the hook, and where shore lines are best attached. It
allows us to enter coves where the chart information is non
existent, which nearly always guarantees us a private anchorage.
Skip Novak is a keen climber,
and many of Pelagic’s trips involve taking mountaineers to unclimbed
peaks. Inside our Ruta, there is also
information on best ascents, pitches of climbs, and camp positions …
serious
stuff.
On our trip down the
Cockburn we eventually came face to face with the ferocity of the
Pacific
Ocean, even with very light wind a nice ground swell squeezed its way
in the
channel. The turn into the Brecknock
Channel exposed us to a serious lee shore hazard, not apparent today
due to the
conditions, but it didn’t take much imagination to conjure up how
difficult it
could be in a blow. As we
neared our
anchorage we were escorted in by approximately 100 southern fur seals,
who
obviously enjoyed showing off their agility in the water, darting up to
the
boat and jumping out of the water. This
is something that I have seen Dolphins do many times, but not seals, it
was
spectacular. I went a little mad with
my new digital SLR camera with the seals, as it takes 5 frames per
second in
action mode, and so I quickly rattled off nearly 450 pictures just of
the
seals, but it was worth to get some mid flight seals, which I would
never have
got without the new camera … thank you Jackie.
Ian Jinks on Pelagic
signing out |