Saltwater Spritzing - Shark Bay, Cape Upstart, Queensland, Australia

Harmonie
Don and Anne Myers
Wed 26 May 2010 20:46
19:43.436S  147:45.122E
 
Our trek north continued today (5/26/10) with no wind and more than enough rain to wash any residual salt off the deck.  Not that the deck had all that much salt on it to begin with.  This flat water sailing/motoring thing has lots of advantages, not the least of which is very few waves over the bow.  Instead of great floods of seawater streaming down the deck as the bow first spears a wave and then plunges through the top of it, we now get a spritz of saltwater here and there when the bow bounces into a one-foot mini-wave.  Gotta love the Great Barrier Reef .
 
We are about 45 miles northwest of where we were yesterday, and tomorrow we plan to motor another 70 miles with no wind (or at least that's what the weather forecast says) northwest to the next logical stopping point.  We are currently anchored in Shark Bay which lies on the sheltered side of impressive Cape Upstart on the mainland.  No, we didn't go swimming although it was nearly hot enough after the rain disappeared and the sun came out.  Who would swim in a place called Shark Bay anyway?
 
Picture 1 - The first fish of the season.  We have no idea what it was, even after consulting our trusty fish book.  We do know that it was rather ugly - smallish, grayish, long, skinny, and with a giant mouth filled with pointy teeth.  It wasn't a barracuda, but had some of the same features.  After a long two minute struggle with a pair of pliers in the pouring rain, Don extracted the double hook from the pointy teeth filled mouth, and sent the unidentified fish object back into the sea.
 
Picture 2 - Cape Upstart.  Impressive.  Especially since the land that connects it to the rest of the mainland is relatively flat - hence the name Cape Upstart.  When it came to naming things, Captain Cook was no dummy.
 
Anne

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