January 2006 Happy New Year

www.kanaloa55.com
David & Valerie Dobson
Sun 26 Mar 2006 14:21

 

27th January 2006

 

HAPPY NEW YEAR FROM US IN THAILAND!

 

here’s a very brief up-date on where we are and where we’ve been.  Kanaloa sailed from the islands of Vanuatu to Brisbane, Australia at the beginning of October.  An excellent trip and two week stay in Manly marina, very close to Brisbane gave us the opportunity to visit various friends who live in the area, and sail up the Brisbane river with a Craig and his new wife Tammy

 

 

Kanaloa moored in Central Brisbane

 

 

The Wilsons at Craig’s home, Brisbane

 

We first met Craig and his dad, Bob in Madeira in September 97!  Our insurance company insisted we sail below the latitude of 37 South to keep out of the cyclones for the Australian Summer!  Due to the Southerly buster winds that tend to claim a few sailors every year we sheltered, from one that was forecast, in Coffs Harbour, the most northerly harbour in New South Wales.  It deserves its name of ‘buster’.  There was only room for us up against the fisherman’s wharf where we fended Kanaloa off for 48 hours, wishing we’d not offloaded in New Zealand the three huge round fenders we had purchased in ‘La Corunna’, northern Spain for the same type of incident.  Friends came and gave us a tour of the area before it arrived, thankfully, giving us a quick overview of this very beautiful part of Australia.

Fortunately, Kanaloa only got a scratch on the topsides which will be remedied when we get back to Australia.  It was a bit of a rush to get down to Newcastle Marina, just a 2 hour drive North of Sydney, and get Kanaloa laid up for a few months rest while we headed by train down to Sydney to catch a place for Melbourne.

 

David with Kathryn outside her lakeside home.

 

We had really wanted to see our dear friend Kathryn Page, who had made firm friends with us whilst we were both anchored in Tahiti in 2000.  She had sadly lost her husband, Mayer who died from cancer in June.  It was thanks to them that David got a handle on having his PSA checked in Tahiti in 2000, and thence discovered that things were amiss in 2003 having his prostate removed in Feb 2004.  We had dinner friends of hers, two other couples who are also sailors, living in Melbourne.  It’s extraordinary that one of them has since died from a heart attack at the end of last year – so you just never know when your number is up!  Our friends John and Alison Wicks who also live in Melbourne collected us from her house and took us to try out his motor boat at Lakes Entrance, a three hour drive South East from Melbourne on the coast.  John and Alison also crossed the Atlantic with us in 1997, and are now living permanently in Melbourne.  They used to be members of West Mersea Yacht Club we belong to in England.  John calls his motorboat ‘compromise’, the yearning for another sailing boat is still there!

 

‘Compromise at Lakes Entrance

 

Arial view of Lakes Entrance

 

Lakes Entrance is a little like the Norfolk Broads, with lots water winding its way round islands, a paradise for small boats.  A very narrow and shallow channel prevents deep draft boats from entering however.  The beach goes on for miles and miles, so typical of the Australian coastline.

A typical outing with John and Alison was enjoyed at the local winery, more like a pub with loads of artwork covering the walls created by his wife.   Slurps of wine galore , John’s such a good customer, no wonder they were dancing on the beach afterwards!

 

Wyanga park Winery’s cartoon depicts the atmosphere

 

 

Australian White Pelicans preening themselves

 With such profusion of wildlife along the way, it makes for a delightfully pleasant day out with only the stress of going aground on sandbanks to contend with, in highly protected waters, so there’s never a real problem.

 

A rapid 2 night stop in Singapore to buy electronic gadgets we’d been dreaming of, having been out of contact with civilization for so long whilst in Vanuatu was a bit of a shock to the system.

Christmas decorations down Orchard Road were in full swing, as was Raffles Hotel
                    

 

 

1st December 2005

 

Currently, David and I are in Phuket, Thailand, living ashore in a house, enjoying a three month sabbatical from sailing and travelling.  I never imagined I would ever enjoy living on ‘terra firma’ again, so happy am I to bob up and down on Kanaloa in a safe anchorage or mooring.

 

Our 2 houses with Tropical gardens,  satellite TV and rapid internet, why not?

 

We are absolutely loving the challenge of getting to grips with the culture of Thailand and setting up a small and welcoming home here for ourselves and for our friends and family to use next door.  The weather from December to April is absolutely ideal, not too hot and hardly any rain, so quite a nice place to come and relax during the chilly Northern Hemisphere winter and the very hot Southern Hemisphere summer.  Thai people could not be more pleasant and respectful and the food is delicious. We have very good friends next door in this quiet cul de sac, who organized the purchasing and building of the two houses for us way back in March last year.   We had been in touch by phone asking how they fared after the Tsunamis, and promptly latched onto their idea of buying two houses in Phuket at the same time as they did!  We crossed the Atlantic with them in 1997 and have seen quite a lot of them during our visits to Fiji and New Zealand.

 

Sally is Thai, married for 30 years to Alf, an ex-Norwegian airline pilot. They are bringing up their 16 month old granddaughter, a bundle of fun and full of laughter, David’s new girlfriend!

 

 

 

David with Ing who is 14 months old

 Buying a house here seems to be catching on amongst a lot of UK cruisers, who are fed up with the high prices in the UK and realize how delightful Thailand is as a base and very good value for property and everything that needs to be used to furnish the house.

 

We have so much enjoyed the friends we have made in New Zealand and Australia that we are half way between those two countries and the UK, giving us more of an opportunity to go and visit  without having to endure a 36 hour flight!  A couple of months in Thailand a year will also allow us time to visit other countries in Asia, using Phuket as a base for any artifacts we might want, instead of Kanaloa!  So much for plans, in reality, we are enjoying each day as if it were the last, and just grateful for the good fortune we are having being well and in each other’s company.

 

 

Hence the delay in writing this newsletter, as we have been madly rushing around buying furniture and fittings, organizing the kitchens for each house and getting our teeth done!  Dentists are a third of the prices encountered so far in the UK, New Zealand and Oz!  Is my mouth rattling have already had 18 teeth capped?  No – but both of us are on soup every other day due to such sore gums!

Recently planted front Garden looks as if we’ve been for ages doesn’t it?

 

 

 

This is Joy, trying to teach us to speak Thai?

 

On that note, I shall sign off till further news