Showing posts with label Australia Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia Day. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Australia Day in Paradise


Happy Australia Day to everyone out there!
What perfect weather to celebrate our National Day. We started off with brekky on the back deck, shared by a baby kookaburra.
He's very sweet and gentle, despite that sharp beak. Still has all his fluffy baby feathers.
I save leftover bbq sausages as a treat for him but he has to fight for his meat, as the baby magpies also enjoy them.
Our first pineapple was also a treat for the day. Tiny but delicious, this golden gem came from our vegie garden, the first of many, we hope.
Unfortunately, our Tamarillo tree is no more. We had a week of very heavy rain and came out one morning to find it had fallen over. The root ball seemed to have rotted. I don't know much about fruit trees - this was in the garden when we came to the island - but I can only assume it wasn't planted correctly and the roots were not teased out properly when it was planted. What a shame!
Before the rain, we had a long dry spell and our mango tree seems to have died. Either that or it was poisoned. The big mango tree in the next block is also dead. Our new neighbour on the other side of that block, Warwick, had to have his septic cleaned out because the roots of that tree had invaded the system. We suspect he might have poisoned the tree in order that it didn't happen again. And the poison probably spread to our tree. A great pity. We shall cut it back and see if it recovers.
But back to Australia Day!! With five other members of the Boat Club on board, we boarded "Bonnington" and sailed to Blakesleys Beach on North Stradbroke. It was a perfect day for sailing, just enough wind to fill the sails but not too choppy for the people on board who were not used to the heeling of a yacht (power boaties).
Blakesleys was almost deserted. On the horizon we could see wall to wall sails at Horseshoe Bay so obviously the nor'easter had discouraged the mainlanders from trying for Straddie. Yay! We had the place to ourselves.
We soon set up a bbq and enjoyed a glass of sav blanc or a XXXX whilst the snaggers sizzled.

(Why does Queensland beer have four Xs and Mexican Beer only have 2?)

A fantastic day and a great trip home with no problems. A bit of lubrication on our furler seems to have almost solved the problem with the jib. We just need an extra pulley to alter the angle that the sheet comes out of the furler. I think that will solve the problem.

Happy Australia Day everyone!!




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Sunday, February 15, 2009

Australia Day Weekend at Tulleenderley

We were told that Tulleenderley was a great spot for an overnight camp. Soft, white sand, enbankment above the beach which was perfect for camping ... you get the drift. And Queensland is famous for its weather ... beautiful one day and perfect the next.

So seven boats set off down the Canaipa passage between Russell Island and North Stradbroke early one Saturday morning. The perfect Queensland weather failed to materialise. It was raining. Not cold, for it's never cold here, but the rain was quite heavy and getting worse by the minute.

Our boat failed to make the grade. We launched it, we tried to start it ... no go. Note to self: Never, ever take the boat out without trying the engine first in the backyard. Yes, we had the battery charged but it turned out to be the starter motor. We could have saved a couple of hours of fuming and cursing if we had just checked first. We were saved by Judy and Robert who took us in their boat Gadfly.

Of course, this meant we were last to arrive. Two large yachts were anchored in the deeper parts of the passage and the smaller boats were inshore. Friends waved from the beach as we approached. But where was this white sandy shore? Well, it was sandy ..... at high tide there was about 1 metre of it before the promised enbankment. Up there, the group had started a camp fire to cut down on the mosquito population. The mozzies were buzzing with excitement at the new arrivals and I quickly realised I had only been taken to act as bait. If I sat somewhere, every mozzie within 50km surrounded me, leaving everyone else free. Sigh!

The fire was not to the liking of another local inhabitant. A large monitor lizard had been resting up a tree when we arrived and the smoke rising up from the bonfire below the tree made him quite alarmed.

It took a while but we persuaded him down with a small piece of raw meat. After that, he became a pest, ravaging all the picnic bags and hissing at us if we tried to deter him.


Then it was time to set up camp. We checked out the enbankment but the only available space had already been taken by the SBS (small blonde sheila) and the Lieutenant Commander. Judy and Robert found a spot further back in the trees and Guy and I decided to brave the foreshore. We camped on the beach within centimetres of the high water mark.

Tents erected just in time before the heavy rain came in. We returned to the camp fire and had a glass of wine. The Vice Commodore had his Barry Mackenzie hat on and the Patron looked the part with her Oz flag shorts.

It wasn't the best weather, as it rained all day and most of the night. But we managed to have a good bbq and a few beers to celebrate.

Happy Australia Day to all our viewers!