Monday, December 26, 2016

Christmas 2016

Friday morning was beaut

Billy on the wheel leaving Havelock

Mike and Billy at Portage

Portage looking down the Kenepuru

Mike settled for the night


Orion from the Kenepuru Road

Mike and Poppy


Grape Escape
Christmas morning



Grape Escape comes alongside
(with whitebait patties for our breakfast)

Back in Havelock for Christmas dins

Ferndale, Portage and Te Mahia

Sunday, November 27, 2016

Nightingale


Nightingale departing Havelock

Very exciting! Dion has bought Nightingale after a long period of negotiation, and with friend Sarah is taking her to Tuna Bay, Tennyson Inlet. This is a new lease on life for this grand old boat, so full of character. We shall enjoy to visit them there some time over the summer.


Sticky moment

It doesn't look it in this photograph, but the wind was NW 25 knots with frequent gusts of 35 knots. Nightingale stuck on soft mud on the eastern side of the entrance but was towed off by Pelorus Image, seen here standing by as Nightingale gets lined up for the channel. 

They spent the night in Maori Bay. It was a wild night with strong gusts and that strange swirling thing it does. We were relieved when next morning Dion texted us "Just coming into Tennyson, sun's out for arrival". 

Monday, November 21, 2016

Sue's birthday cruise

Windy sky in the Kenepuru

Bex and Ryan were going to come, but the earthquake closed the road through Kaikoura. It would have been a long drive via Nelson. The isobars were a tad close together for a serious fishing trip, so we spent a windy afternoon at Raetihi and then woke to an idyllic Sunday morning, the day of Sue's birthday. Pottered back late morning and into the early afternoon. The first hot day in a long while. We were warned of driftwood everywhere after the flood, and while there was some it was not so much. There is a very large piece lodged on the bank east of the Johnson transit marks.

Very HW Havelock

Pat Copp took this picture. The super moon created king tides, plus floodwater after an extraordinary weather event brought the water level up to within an inch of the top. See the colour of the water too. At the bridge over the Wairau the river was bank to bank and flowing strongly. Crystal was on board Lucy on the night of the quake and said it felt as if a giant was shaking the boat.

Havelock Channel

The blue pin marks the position of a large tree with several big branches that has grounded on the bank. It maybe this tree is stuck forever until it eventually rots. If it's ever missing then it has floated off somewhere and could be a real hazard to navigation. We were keeping a very good lookout for timber as we transited the channel on the weekend. Bob tells us it takes four days for the driftwood to clear after a big event. We saw some, but it was mostly small debris floating in long ribbons along lines of tide. 

Saturday, November 12, 2016

Testing Christmas tech

Christmas tech

We believe that thorough preparation and rigorous testing lead to successful missions. So here we are testing our Christmas tech in heavy rain and failing light.

Sunday, November 6, 2016

Welcome visit

Richard, Maree, and Janice Rowley

No trip out, but a night's stay on board and a chance to recover their equilibrium after a friend's funeral. Haste ye back in summer.


Thursday, October 27, 2016

Holiday traffic

Cullen Point inward

Sometimes boats are just like cars. We're stuck behind the slow moving cruiser, three fizz boats shot past us, one got ahead of the cruiser and two got stuck behind. Labour Day mayhem in the Havelock Channel.

Long Bay, Kenepuru

On a more tranquil note, here we are in Long Bay. We spent Labour Weekend loafing about, very busy doing nothing. On the Monday we went exploring up the top of the Kenepuru on the other side of Portage. It's very pretty up there, and less visited. But then Long Bay is nice, too. Note the boom, we now have a derrick for launching and recovering the dinghy.

Sunday, October 2, 2016

Moutapu Bay

Passing Grape Escape in the Havelock Channel

We pinched the one nice night, the Friday, of an otherwise wet weekend. Here we are on the Saturday morning, passing No. 1 buoy inward and Grape Escape is outward on a short cruise with a shipload of friends. The sun doesn't always have to be shining, who would miss these softer tones in light rain?

Friday, September 23, 2016

Stocks under pressure

Big illuminated sign at the slipway

There'll be mixed opinion, of course. But the scallops are closed for the year. It will be interesting to see the effect this has on the trailer park and the campsite. I have an opinion, of course. I think that rather than close it for a year and then open it again, you might do better to say divers only. Divers don't disturb the sea bed the way dredges do. Fewer people are prepared to go to the trouble of buying the gear and learning to scuba dive than will buy a dredge and throw it off the back of the boat. Just a thought.

Sunday, August 21, 2016

Big tides

The creek at Havelock marina

Saturday high water was predicted at 3.1 metres and low water at 0.4 metres. A high barometer 1030 mb likely pushed the water down that bit more. Sunday was more again with a range of 3 metres. On the flood tide, when the sill is covered that's when we know we have enough water to transit the channel.

Wednesday, August 17, 2016

Dolphins up Kenepuru Sound

Dolphins at Raetihi

They were like a band of marauders, we couldn't count them there were so many. They came heaping it down from St Omer to where we were moored at Raetihi, hung around for a while fishing, and after about fifteen minutes they were off. Made Poppy's day! The video below (1 minute) kind of captures the moment without the feeling of awe and peace that comes with a visitation from marine mammals.