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  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2012/06/28 05:31 LATITUDE: 11-43.41S LONGITUDE: 138-00.35E COURSE: 222T SPEED: 6.7 MARINE: YES WIND_SPEED: 15 WIND_DIR: SSE SWELL_DIR: S SWELL_HT: 1.0M SWELL_PER: 6 CLOUDS: 65% VISIBILITY: 15 BARO: 1014 AIR_TEMP: 23.9C COMMENT: Beach House – Enroute – Gove, Expect A.M. arrival……Seas calming

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2012/06/28 03:35 LATITUDE: 11-31.41S LONGITUDE: 138-55.96E COURSE: 259T SPEED: 7.4 MARINE: YES WIND_SPEED: 15 WIND_DIR: SSE SWELL_DIR: S SWELL_HT: 1.0M SWELL_PER: 6 CLOUDS: 75% VISIBILITY: 15 BARO: 1013 AIR_TEMP: 27.8C COMMENT: Beach House – Enroute – Gove, sailing since last night.. Should arrive tomorrow early a.m. A bit bumpy out here….

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2012/06/27 10:03 LATITUDE: 11-03.90S LONGITUDE: 141-00.18E COURSE: 256T SPEED: 5.3 MARINE: YES WIND_SPEED: 10 WIND_DIR: S SWELL_DIR: SSW SWELL_HT: 1.0M SWELL_PER: 6 CLOUDS: 85% VISIBILITY: 15 BARO: 1013.9 AIR_TEMP: 25.6C COMMENT: Beach House – Enroute – Gove, Northern Territory – Australia. Just started sailing… \”on the wind\”…..

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2012/06/27 03:44 LATITUDE: 10-53.65S LONGITUDE: 141-45.35E COURSE: 257T SPEED: 8.1 MARINE: YES WIND_SPEED: 3 WIND_DIR: SE SWELL_DIR: SSW SWELL_HT: 0.5M SWELL_PER: 5 CLOUDS: 50% VISIBILITY: 15 BARO: 1013.5 AIR_TEMP: 30.6C COMMENT: Beach House – ENROUTE – Gove, NT – Australia…Motoring, no wind…..

    At this speed, 40 hours to go. Hoping for wind….

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2012/06/27 03:44 LATITUDE: 10-53.65S LONGITUDE: 141-45.35E COURSE: 257T SPEED: 8.1 MARINE: YES WIND_SPEED: 3 WIND_DIR: SE SWELL_DIR: SSW SWELL_HT: 0.5M SWELL_PER: 5 CLOUDS: 50% VISIBILITY: 15 BARO: 1013.5 AIR_TEMP: 30.6C COMMENT: Beach House – ENROUTE – Gove, NT – Australia…Motoring, no wind…..

    At this speed, 40 hours to go. Hoping for wind….

  • 2012-06 Depart Cooktown – Lizard Island – Flinders Island – Morris Island – Escape River – Cape York – Thursday Island to Seisia, Australia – Photos

    .                    To see the SHIP\’S BLOGS associated with this PHOTO GALLERY:  Click the following links……

    Morris Island  –  Portland Roads  –  Cape Grenville & Margaret Bay  –   Escape River   –   Escape River Pearls & \”The Top\”
    .                                                     Seisia    –   Thursday Island – Torres Straits Islands

    To see the Wikipedia on Cape York, the \”Top\” of Australia:  CLICK HERE       Thursday Island: CLICK HERE
    .                           Torres Strait Islands:  CLICK HERE                        Torres Strait Islanders:  CLICK\"\"

  • 2012-06 Depart Cooktown – Lizard Island – Flinders Island – Morris Island – Escape River – Cape York – Thursday Island to Seisia, Australia – Photos

    .                    To see the SHIP\’S BLOGS associated with this PHOTO GALLERY:  Click the following links……

    Morris Island  –  Portland Roads  –  Cape Grenville & Margaret Bay  –   Escape River   –   Escape River Pearls & \”The Top\”
    .                                                     Seisia    –   Thursday Island – Torres Straits Islands

    To see the Wikipedia on Cape York, the \”Top\” of Australia:  CLICK HERE       Thursday Island: CLICK HERE
    .                           Torres Strait Islands:  CLICK HERE                        Torres Strait Islanders:  CLICK\"\"

  • Torres Strait Islands…Thursday Island…..

    25 June 2012 (Eastern Hemisphere)

    Dear F&F,

    The Torres Strait Islands are a group of islands, (a few dozen) of which 18 are inhabited. They lie between just a few miles from Papua New Guinea in the north and Australia in the south. They are the islands which differentiate the \”Pacific\” from the Arafura Sea; gateway to the Indian Ocean.

    The uniqueness of these islands is the both their geography and the make up of the peoples who have inhabited them for over 40,000 years. Genetically, they are Melanisians who may have arrived originally from India. Their culture is a hybrid between the peoples of Papua New Guinea (PNG) and the Aboriginals of Northern Australia. Those in the north have language characteristics like PNG and those in the south more like the Northern Aboriginals of Australia.

    The Torres Strait was first sailed by the Spanish Explorer Torres in 1606. The locals of this area were anything from friendly to down right head hunters depending on the island. The sea here, like the entire inside of Australia\’s Great Barrier Reef, is extremely shallow by ocean standards. Depths rarely exceed 200 feet and often are under 50 feet. Due to the extensive reef systems and until recently very poor charting, these waters have been home to many ship wrecks over the centuries. Even today, many areas on our charts (especially from here west), say \”Inadequately Surveyed\” or worse, \”Unsurveyed\”.

    Today, we took the one hour ferry ride from Sesia where we are anchored to Thursday Island. Thursday is the main center of the Torres Strait Islands and is only 20 miles north of the Australian continent. Tourism and Government Offices are it\’s livelihood today, but in years past, it was the Pearl Shell trade. During WW2, Horn Island, just 2 miles from Thursday was the second most attacked part of Australia after Darwin by the Japanese. We visited the Japanese Diver\’s cemetery where hundreds of peal divers were laid to rest, victims of then poorly understood \”bends\”. We visited the most northern pub (bar) in Australia, the \”Quetta\” church (dedicated to those lost in a famous shipwreck here in 1890) and other historic places.

    The ride was fun and we saw old friends, s/v \”Uliad\” at anchor on their recent arrival from the Solomon Islands en-route to join the Sail Indonesia Rally with us (and over 110 other boats). We unfortunately couldn\’t make contact with them but will catch up when we get to Darwin.

    The day was long and fun, we came back, went to the local market and thoroughly enjoyed the day.

    We\’ll have a maintenance, clean up and get ready to go day tomorrow. Our next sail will be Nikki\’s first overnighter on \”Beach House\”. A planned 3 day, 2 night sail across the Gulf of Carpintaria to the Aluminum mining town of Gove.

    KIT, Scott and Nikki

  • Seisia

    24 June 2012 (Eastern Hemisphere)

    Dear F&F,

    Today we went ashore at Cape York and did the vigil to \”The Top\” sign at the very tip of Cape York (The MOST northern piece of land on the Australian Continent). Interestingly, we did this with about 100 of our \”closest friends\”!…:-) It turns out, this is a great \”bucket list\” item for Australians. All ages, all types. Many are veterans of other geographic extremes. The southern most, the eastern most, etc.

    After we did the walk, we took the dinghy to York Island (an entire 100 yards) across from the continental tip. From there we motored around Possession Island (Where Captain Cook formally took possession of Australia for England) and came to the small harbor of Seisa. Seisa was named after the ship that brought five brothers here from the Torres Islands in the mid 1800\’s. The wharf here has a ferry which travels daily from Seisia to Thursday Island which we will try and do tomorrow….SPACE AVAILABLE! It\’s currently sold out with all those Aussie tourists who were at the tip of Cape York with us today! So we\’ll try \”stand by\”.

    We hope to be off from here on our first overnight together on Wednesday to Gove on the opposite side of the Gulf of Carpinteria. (More on that later).

    We are at a nice calm anchorage with only s/v \”Mr. John VI\” (John and Paula) next to us.

    KIT, we\’ll keep you posted. Scott and Nikki

  • POSITION REPORT

    YOTREPS: YES TIME: 2012/06/24 04:33 LATITUDE: 10-50.87S LONGITUDE: 142-21.78E MARINE: NO WIND_SPEED: 15 WIND_DIR: SE CLOUDS: 85% VISIBILITY: 15 BARO: 1014.3 AIR_TEMP: 27.2C COMMENT: Beach House – ANCHORED – Seisa, (at the north entrance to the Gulf of Carpinteria)…..

    Correction, GPS hadn\’t updated!…. resending