Our Journey

Lets buy a boat he said
Our journey from Phillip Island Australia to Toronto Canada and beyond

Monday, March 16, 2020

Monday 24th February 2020

Conception Island 
The land is sandstone which produces such interesting landscapes 
Our plans keep changing, not the big stuff we are still heading towards Puerto Rico but the stops along the way chop and change as we arrive at one destination and prepare to move on.  
We sailed out of Thompson Bay early this morning along with Yellowbird, Seamlessly and Breakaway heading back to Calabash Bay to spend the night ready for an early start heading towards Conception island then it looks like there is a 3 day weather window that will allow us a smooth passage to Dominican Republic. 

Once we arrived back in Thompson Bay we literally just dropped the anchor ate a meal and relaxed, all the boats had their dinghies raised ready for the rougher outside passage in the morning so there was no socialising or visiting shore.

Up early we had a lovely sail, its easy once we reach the deeper waters there are no Coral Heads and all the reefs are marked on the charts.

Conception Island what can I say, I run out of adjectives to describe the color of the sand and the clear blue waters and this Island is pristine, the approach was one of the most beautiful we have experienced.


We were blessed with a beautiful sunny day as we manoeuvred our way as close to shore as feels safe, dodging the coral heads was easy as the water was so clear.  It always feels that the beach is right there and you can swim ashore from the boat but in reality it’s actually a lot further than it looks and quite often we laugh at how far out we actually are once we have dropped the anchor.


We are so glad we made the decision to stop here, it’s beautiful, with one other boat in the small bay when we arrived we felt guilty disturbing their solitude. 
One of the most beautiful places we have visited so far !!

Craig dropped the dingy as soon as we were happy the anchor was secure and we headed to shore for a swim, we literally swam in our underwear not wanting to waste a minute of the opportunity to have the  pristine empty beach to ourselves before the others arrived.  
Luckily we didn't jump off the back of the boat as we have done in other locations, there are sharks and barracudas in these waters and sure enough a large lemon shark was hovering around the whole time we were there.  We also had stingrays and a larger unidentified black shark, clearly visible swimming under Adriana. 
A  huge lemon shark hung around all the boats at anchor its not a very clear photo but he is there !!
We met Catherine and Steve on the beach and apologized for disturbing their tranquility but I think they were happy to find someone new to talk to and they invited us all into their boat for sundowners. 
Leanne and Kevin on Seamlessly were originally going to visit Conception with us but that morning as they were pulling up their anchor the windlass, or anchor winch, had a malfunction and broke a part so they had to leave us and head back to Georgetown, Conception was going to be their last stop with us as they are heading back to Florida to do doggy paperwork, provision and then they are off to Panama for hurricane season.  You never know we may cross paths again, I do hope so. 

Once the others arrived we took a walk through the scrub to the more ocean side and beachcombed along the rugged beach finding these great cliffs, then back to the more sheltered beach for a swim.  

The rugged side of the island 

Rugged and stunning 


Crystal Clear waters a natural swimming pool

I didn't take any photographs but there was a lot of plastic rubbish in the sand dunes



Catherine and Steve are on a 2019, 63ft Nordhavn - its a beautiful big motor boat, they are from the UK, they have previously circumnavigated the world on a yacht and are now enjoying the luxury of their motor boat on their way to Nova Scotia then Greenland. It was interesting having a peek through the larger boat and wow it was very modern and spacious inside and it was lovely chatting to them and listening to their stories.
Conception is a National Park 







We planned to leave conception around 4pm so there was enough time to visit  the mangroves, the documented "must see"  Kyra joined us for the adventure.  The only problem was we had to dingy around the corner and into open water to find the entrance, the waves were big and tbh I was way out of my comfort zone... But it was worth the long trip, once we were over the bumpy shallow entrance the waters were smooth, and crystal clear surrounded by mangroves and full of green turtles, it was quite magical, the turtles would pop their little heads up now and then, and swim off in a great hurry as if they knew they had been seen, we were amazed at how fast they can swim when they are disturbed, unfortunately we didn’t take any photos we were too traumatized by the wet dingy ride to unwrap the camera from its sopping wet, protective wet weather bag. 
The trip back was easier, surfing the waves instead of punching into them, until Kyra moved forward to look over the front and nearly burrowed the dingy nose in the water almost flipping us forward, we righted ourselves just in time, too many sharks in these waters to go for a swim, apparently the sharks here are nothing like great whites but I’m not convinced.
it was a beautiful bay and we are happy with what we have seen and experienced in The Bahamas.


4pm and Adriana, Yellowbird and Breakaway all headed out through the surrounding reefs and coral heads ready for our ocean crossing to Dominican Republic.


We will not be stopping at Turks and Caicos or Mayguana as originally planned the weather window we are looking at will allow us a nonstop smooth ride all the way to Dominican Republic, if we stop along the way, there is a good chance we could be stuck on an outer island for a week or two, the weather is rather unsettled this year.  Also Turks are Caicos Island are super expensive $50pp to land then $50pp to leave for one night, if you stay longer whether you want to or you have to it’s $300 for a week, more for longer stays.  
Theses 2 islands are British Owned and run, not very cruiser friendly, they must cater more to the Mega yachts. 
It was funny we heard chatting on the vhf radio from 12 other boats leaving from Georgetown, planning to do the crossing on the same night, then as the night progressed, one by one we could hear them admit defeat and turn around and head back to chicken harbour.  From either equipment failure, seasickness, or it was just too uncomfortable.

I must admit it was uncomfortable to start with, the waves were huge, breaking over the bow as we plowed through them, the momentum was nauseating and a bit scary, the boat slapped down into the water with a huge thuds, downstairs things were being thrown around nothing that will do any damage, that’s all secure but when it’s big my clothes start falling off the shelves in the bedroom. Tacking back and forth it seemed we had gone nowhere, in 4 hours we were still off the coast of Long Island not much beyond where we had been 2 days before. 

But tacking allowed us to get over to our rum line that then allowed us to sail all through the night in the right direction with the wind pulling us along.  I don’t mind night passages the wind seems to come from one direction for hours so there’s no hoisting or pulling down sails, only the occasional adjustment to bring them closer to the wind plus any other boats will show on AIS or radar or both, an added bonus is that their navigation lights are so distinguishable in the dark for a long distance away.  
Around 2am the wind changed direction and dropped dramatically so did the sea state which allowed for a smoother more comfortable sail.  We managed to keep sailing through the night, but  by 7am it was so still we had to bring down our sails and motor, the diesel engine went on and off a few times through the day, as the winds shifted, increased and dropped in strength, I think we managed to sail most of the day, but by the second day we it was so calm we had to run the engine we did try big red but there was not even enough wind to fly the kite, but the upside to this is the seas are much calmer, at one stage we did encounter a squall quickly bringing down the main sail, the only sail we had up, in case it was a big one, but luckily we only experience a good rain shower with no wind or lightning whew... the center of the front passed by without incident.
There is always a sunset or sunrise to look forward to



We travelled 660nm, It took us 62 hours we caught a deep sea tuna that we kept Craig decided to let go the large barracuda that we caught, there is a disease the larger reef fish carry that is poisonous to humans  it’s called sacaterra,      apparently the smaller barracuda are ok to eat but the bigger reef fish can carry the disease that is poisonous to humans.
What we really want to catch are dolphin fish, wahu, grouper or even snapper but we keep snagging tunas and barracudas.  
I still cannot watch when we reel in a fish
In the middle of the second night while Craig was asleep I witnessed a flash in the sky it was incredibly bright like when you burn magnesium but green in color, it came into sight above the horizon then disappeared into the water in the blink of an eye then it was back to being enveloped by stars.

I find the stars really hard to look at when we are on passage the sky is so big and so black and there are trillions of stars, big bright ones and large constellations that are so thick with light,  I think it’s the concept of infinity that weirds me out. But I can sit for hours watching the bio luminescence crackle in our wake below us.


Dominican Republic


Our first sight of land are red flashing lights way way off in the distance they turn out to be wind generators all along the Dominican coastline. 
Approaching a totally new country as the sunrises is worth the stress of an overnight passage

As daylight emerges we start to be able to see the green mountains, The Bahama Island were all so flat and windswept bare its exciting to see the lush green of the mountains.  We are aware of the smell of land it smells like chocolate and coffee and fertile soils.
The Dominican is such a welcome change from the barren landscapes of the Bahamas 
The Dominican Republic is tropical Island,we are still in the North Atlantic though but that will change as we head to the Southern coas. We have heard avocados and mango, coconuts and papaya grow wild on the side of the road and they supply bananas and sweet potato to the rest of the world.

Once we were close to land we had to stop, bopping around in the waves waiting on the free guide service to lead us through a narrow lopsided Chanel that once traversed opens up into the large Lupron harbour
Following our guide boat through the sketchy channel

The channel opened up into a huge protected harbour
All through the night Whyrow a motor sailor with Laura Colin and their 2 children both under 6, had been like a buddy boat to us, checking in with us every few hours to compare notes and have a chat we saw only 2 large tankers and only one catamaran passed us going in the opposite direction we marvel at the size of the oceans and how little traffic we see out there.
There are families and couples living on all kinds of vessels, this is Whyrow


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