Friday, 12 December 2014

On our way again Nov - Dec (Durban - Port St Francis)

A hearty hello from the quaint little marina in the harbor of Port St Francis. 

Finally our journey is under way again.  Whilst in Japan we paid close attention to the weather and realized that there was a really good possibility for leaving on Friday 21 November, the wind was looking really favourable.  We notified Graeme to get his leave in and start making plans for his trip to Durban as he was coming with as crew.  We landed in Durban from Japan on Sunday the 15th and hit the ground running.  Tuesday we had to make a quick visit to the Dentist to re-stick one of Kevin’s crowns that came loose while in Japan.  A quick dash down the coast to collect bank cards that had been delivered to my mom for us, purchasing paper charts for the entire trip – Durban to Cape Town, purchasing and installing a new 70m anchor chain and rope as ours was badly rusted on a couple of links.  Filling up with diesel, gas cylinders, mounting a new Raymarine display Kevin had bought for the Nav table inside and diving under the boat to clean the props – Kevin was brave enough to do that in the awful harbor water, I was happy to pay someone!!

Then on Wednesday Runa of South African Sailing threw us a beautiful curve ball, while we were currently still in date on our safety certificate, due to expire mid-December, if we were to be stopped and checked anywhere along the coast we would be in trouble as it would have expired.  The biggest issue with this was that this year we would be required to take the boat out of the water and clean and anti-foul and have our through hull fittings examined.  We had decided to put it off til Cape Town as we are planning to haul out and do some extensive work on her anyway and figured we would have the inspection carried out afterwards.  Anyway, Runa managed to organize an inspection for Wednesday afternoon and the Inspector was happy to examine the through hull fittings on the inside, fortunately all our safety gear was in date, only the fire extinguishers that needed servicing which was done in a day and we were approved and ready to sail, pshew. 


Unusually grey Durban
Fetched Graeme from the airport on Thursday, did the final provisioning, final bits and pieces that needed attention, safety gear out and paperwork filled in and cleared out with Customs and Port Control.  Then 6:30 Friday morning we were off.  
The MSC Opera had stopped off
There were approximately 6 other yachts that departed around the same time, some ARC (Atlantic Rally Cruise) boats and some just internationals travelling to Cape Town, was nice to know we had company. 

We stayed in shore for the first day, sailing past Hibberdene at around 6pm (wind terribly light so motor sailing) at the same time as the rain arrived so unfortunately my mom and Faye could only briefly see the light at the top of our mast, but we made the effort anyway.  On the way down, both rods were out and both got a strike at the same time, the definition of confusion was when Graeme grabbed a rod that was running and started reeling only to hear line running still.  They both worked really hard and pulled in two beautiful tuna’s.  
Sushi straight away – delicious, only we ran out of ginger – oh dear bad provisioning – made a note for next time.  When sailing past Umtwalume there was a large splash, Kevin shouted whale and I said no way, it’s a rock.  Well next thing the “rock” lifted its flipper and then its tail and slapped them on the water numerous times.  Took a while to live that down.  Once past Hibberdene we headed straight out to sea to try to find decent wind and some favourable current, approximately 18nm off shore, and there both of them were, only in the shipping lane.  Thank goodness for the AIS receiver we have in our radio (www.imo.org/OurWork/Safety/Navigation/Pages/AIS.aspx), it enabled us to see ships coming from front and rear and to take avoiding action, the problem is they couldn’t see us as we only had a receiver, not a transceiver.  Thus every now and then one of these ships would suddenly change course and head our way again, kept us on our toes right through the night, at one stage I was convinced we were about to become the pink bit in a polony sandwich.  By Saturday we had good wind, had the spinnaker flying and 4 knots of current with us, we were flying along, surfing down waves and reaching speeds of up to 13 knots, absolutely awesome.  Saturday night, as we neared Port Elizabeth and Cape Town, the shipping activities seemed to increase, not good for the nerves.  I insisted we get an AIS transceiver before we leave Port Elizabeth, this would make us visible on the ships AIS as well and they would be able to make provision for us, thankfully Kevin agreed.

Algoa Bay Yacht Club
Sunday was foggy, misty and rainy and the wind had once more died off.  We were back to motor sailing and couldn’t see more than a couple of meters around us, quite daunting to know huge ships were passing within 3nm of us and we couldn’t see any part of them, developed huge respect for sailors from years ago who didn’t have the advantage of modern sailing equipment such as AIS, must have been terrifying to see great ships looming out of the dark and mist.  We ended up crossing Algoa Bay without seeing any of it, we managed to make out Seal Island in the mist.  We did pass a little seal quietly lazing in the water but that was it, we had only seen dolphins twice and at a great distance and the one
Algoa Bay Yacht Club Moorings
“whale rock”.  We arrived in Port Elizabeth Harbour and ultimately Algoa Bay Yacht Club at 4:30 Sunday afternoon, to a very warm PE reception, lots of hands to catch mooring lines.  Our mooring was at the end of a very rickety “L-shaped” finger, they have very few moorings and quite a number of boats, some of which were our travelling companions from Durban.

Monday and we took it easy packing stuff away and generally tidying up, then as it was raining we caught a taxi into town to Barney’s, a famous bar on the beach front.  Graeme is a great Port Elizabeth guide, very knowledgeable.  Barneys has paddles of beer, you select the ones you wish to taste and voila.  Micro brewing seems big in this part of the world.  We had lunch there, then on to the Beer House, Humewood Hotel and back to the Club bar, a real pub crawl, thank goodness the rain had held up.  



On Tuesday we headed for the airport with Graeme to send him home, thanks Graeme, what a great trip.  We then decided to hire a car as taxi fares were starting to cost and very little was within walking distance of the Yacht Club.  Wednesday we popped down to see the Marina in St Francis Bay, we were keen to see about making a stop here on the way down the coast.  The St Francis and Nexus catamarans are manufactured here and we were interested in having a look at the factories.  St Francis Bay is a bit of a geographical puzzlement, well for someone as directionally challenged as me anyway.  First off, as you approach St Francis from Port Elizabeth, is Jeffries Bay, famous surfing spot and popular holiday destination.  Next is St Francis Bay, followed by Port St Francis and then round the corner is Oyster Bay.  We thought we could start at Oyster Bay and head along the coast all the way down to the canals at St Francis, nope! 20kms of dirt road, our little white rental car looking like a tractor and we were in Oyster Bay.  Merely a little residential village with NOTHING of interest, beautiful houses and views though and no through fare to Port St Francis, so back along the dirt road, the car is now brown all over and we arrive in Port St Francis where the Harbour and Marina are.  What a gorgeous little marina, very little, but good solid moorings, apparently the whole thing blasted out of rock, surrounded on all sides by blocks of holiday and residential flats and a couple of restaurants and one or two small shops and alongside the only private small commercial harbor in South Africa, catering for Chokka Boats, chokka being squid or as we all know it, calamari, we have found the calamari kingdom!!!!  


A brief calamari lunch at one of the restaurants and a stop at the harbor master who was not very confident of having a mooring available for us within the next two weeks, he was expecting ARC boats and had limited available space, especially for catamarans, and we were off again.  We eventually realized that all the areas are individual communities and are accessed by one main road, one cannot drive along the coast uninterrupted….. 

We got back to Port Elizabeth and the wind was blowing a gale from the North East, the first of two such blows.  The harbor is fully protected from the terrible South Westers we are prone to on the South African coast, but the entrance to the Club faces out to sea and all the wind and huge waves of a North Easter pound into the marina.  Needless to say we bounced around like a cork on the ocean, whilst tied up to the mooring, for two days.  Once the wind died down, the sea state continued for quite some time afterward.  All the jerking and bouncing up and down caused two of our eyebrows above the portlights to break, one of our cleats pulled loose in our deck and over two weeks four of our mooring lines chaffed through/snapped.  In 2009 in really bad weather the finger broke in places, causing 4 boats to sink and damaging others as well as the walk-ons.  We could understand how that was possible. 

Friday we flew back to Durban to go fetch our car.  Made a pit stop at the Durban Marina, said cheers and thanks to everyone in the office, they really made our stay in Durban a pleasure.  Then it was off to Skiport to collect our new AIS transceiver, woo hoo, and then down to my mom for the night.  Saturday we travelled through the Transkei to Gonubie. 
The countryside is beautiful but oh my goodness EVERYTHING crosses the road at will here, dogs, horses, donkeys, goats, cows, pigs and sheep and the most stupid are definitely sheep – one starts running and they all run, at full gallop, wherever and wherever is usually into the road!! My nerves!! We nearly collected a Larry or two.  Sad to see so many dead dogs along the road, pity.  
The Rose and Ale

We spent the night in a lovely guest house in Gonubie, The Rose and Ale.  

Went and found the pub in Cintsa West that we spent so much time at during our holiday in East London years ago, like a step back in time, new owners and more patrons but the bar was just the same.  

Buffalo River Yacht Club from
Latimers Landing
Buffalo River Yacht Club looking
toward Latimers Landing
Sunday morning we headed for the marina, well firstly for Latimers Landing, once a beautiful area but now derelict and dirty.  We found the Buffalo River Yacht Club house eventually, closed, and had a peek at the boats, one small jetty on which a couple of boats were moored, the rest were all on swing moorings.  Not sorry we bypassed this L  
NSRI from Spur Port Alfred

Next stop was Port Alfred and lunch at the Spur on the waterfront, how beautiful.  These waterways used to be used for Formula 1 boat racing, the houses surrounding the waterways are magnificent. 
 Next stop was Port Elizabeth and our poor tatty looking boat.  A big surprise was the Admiral power cat tied up next to and onto us that had arrived the day before, a quick stop on its way to Cape Town from Madagascar and on board as crew with David Bird, was Luke, last seen heading for Madagascar as crew on Andrea Helena.  Late lunch was calamari (recommended by Nic of Skiport in Durban) at the Yacht Club, one of Port Elizabeth’s top 10 restaurants and it really deserves that title, their food is excellent.

Must be some kind of record, in one week we have sailed, flown and driven the route from Durban to Port Elizabeth.

Monday we went to the Addo Elephant Park, the bottom entrance only ½ an hour down the road.  We had a marvelous day, spotted Zebra, a Jackal, Ostrich, loads of Tortoises, the very rare flightless Dung Beetle, a couple of Hawks, Kudu, Warthogs and Red Hartebeest and best of all Elephants, firstly one or two lone giants, then a herd in the road which eventually caused us to turn and retrace our tracks, too big to argue with in our little Micra.  
We stopped for lunch at the Cattle Baron in the Park, then back past an area where Elephants are known to be 
and we found a water/mud hole and a herd of Ellies of all sizes, big adults, teenagers and little babies and boy did they have fun in the mud, spraying it all over themselves and rolling in it. 

A little further down the road and eventually us and a couple of other cars were literally surrounded by herds of elephants all slowly strolling toward the same water/mud hole, what an amazing experience.
 









Before we left Port Elizabeth, we managed a trip to the famous Bridge Street Brewery, I was elated to find they do their own brew draught cider, lovely.

We had found a weather window that would get us to either Port St Francis or Knysna on Thursday night/Friday, a 10 hour sail and after a call to the Port Captain in Port St Francis, fortunately the ARC boats had passed on by and we could stay in Port St Francis for two weeks.  What joy as our poor boat was getting more ruined by the minute where we were, the wind in Port Elizabeth blows the black dust from the piles in the harbor and when you wash it off it leaves the boat yellow.  

The piles are manganese and the fiberglass is porous!!  We managed a dinner with Jenny and the girls on Wednesday night, great to catch up, last time we saw them was when we were all in Australia and left our car parked in her garage on Thursday after getting provisioning done, then an afternoon nap and by 9:00pm we threw the lines off and bid Port Elizabeth farewell.

We hadn’t reckoned the point of the bay into account in our travel calculations and ended up with an extra 15nm on our trip, but what a lovely night sail, two nights away from full moon, stars galore and hardly any ships, although  now we could see them and they could see us.  
Sunrise just outside Port St Francis
The entrance into Port St Francis is tricky and very tight so conditions have to be perfect to enter, we got here at 8:30am to a lovely gentle sea and Kevin made the entrance and sharp turn perfectly, then a handbrake turn and reversed into our new home, Nexus Yachts mooring, they had just waved their first production yacht, Nexus 1, launched in 2009, on her way as she was part of the ARC and on her circumnavigation.  After a couple of whiskey coffees, its cold in this part of the world, even though it is summer! then a couple of hours sleep and we were good as new.



We have spent some time exploring the coast, lovely walks up and down along the sea shore and nature walks through the bush and over dunes.  We got a ride back to Port Elizabeth and fetched our car, helpful here as there is no convenience store for at least an hour’s walk, long distance to carry groceries.  We spent a day scrubbing and scouring our decks, using tons of elbow grease and skin and not making a huge impact on the yellow, figured we need to put in more effort.  Then in a stroke of luck we paid a visit to the two catamaran factories and at St Francis we were told of a product that they use to get rust and stains off their boats, available in the Village – St Francis is so quaint it doesn’t have a town, it has a Village.  
We also visited Nexus yachts, had received an invite from one of the owners who we met in the Marina, and got a tour of the two new yachts they are building, very interesting.  We got the Rust Stain Remover and got stuck in and by the end of the day we had scrubbed the boat back to white, all over, it was a huge success and we could all smile again, especially MaxScene. 

The NSRI here are extremely busy, at least once per week they launch and extract an injured or sick sailor from the Chokka boats.  On Sunday morning we happened to be looking down on the Commercial Marina in time to see them coming in with one of the Chokka boats, unfortunately one of the sailors had what they think was a heart attack and passed away, a risky business this Chokka boat story, watching them reminds me a lot of watching Deadliest Catch.

We have a fan.  Sitting outside in the cockpit the other night, Kevin was rudely interrupted in his musings by a large splash and plop on the back step and up into the cockpit came a curious but timid Sea Otter.  He/she, not sure how to tell yet, spent the better part of an hour and a half scooting up one step, across the back and into the water off the other step, Kevin eventually managed to get a couple of decent photos although it wasn’t easy cos the little otter was just as curious and nearly knocked his whiskey off the seat trying to get up there to see him.  We even had to shut the door to stop it going inside.  It seems very comfortable on our boat as in the morning we sometimes find pieces of fish and scales across the deck and hear it sliding off the back when one of us gets out of bed.  So privileged.



It is absolutely gorgeous here, a little peace of paradise indeed.  Right now it is quiet and beautiful but apparently that is all about to change, as of this weekend the tourists arrive and apparently it gets full to capacity, many people from up country own holiday homes here, the anticipation is huge and mixed feelings as tourists bring money but upset the equilibrium.  There is a bar here in the Marina that is only open 20 days of the year, it opened on Thursday for the “Season”.  The Boat and Yacht Club (word Yacht used very loosely) is also only open on Friday night, Saturday and Sunday but as of 10 December they are open all day every day.  
Two gulls arguing over a fish
Great view from their balcony and lovely people.  There is so much movement of yachts down the coast, between the usual influx of international yachts, there are the ARC boats and the Governors Cup, a race from Cape Town to St Helena, starts 2 or 3 January, that we have not been able to find anywhere down the coast that we can moor if we leave here, so we have been able to secure another two weeks here, until between Christmas and New Year, for which we are very grateful and extremely happy.


Thank you all for the birthday wishes and for thinking of me, we had an amazing day, forced ourselves to relax and do nothing, a short walk then Kevin cooked an awesome breakfast and bought me a lovely ankle bracelet and earrings in the Shell Shop, then a yummy lunch/dinner at the Chokka Blok Restaurant, finishing just in time before load shedding hit, fortunately that doesn’t bother us too much on the boat so we chilled with good wine and tunes, well and truly spoiled, what a day…..

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