Friday, November 13, 2020

Hinchinbrook Island - Zoe bay, east coast, Brooke Islands to Cape Richards (Day 3)

 Saturday 26 Sept 2020.

Caught up on sleep (after 2-3 hrs on first night) Woke to the "Northwind 7" TS motoring past about 8 am and the stunning views of cloud and rainforest cloaked mountains.

Other yachts were also up-anchoring too and most were heading south in the opposite direction to nearby Lucinda. The trip north was a longer one with few boats to be seen at all.

Had to motor all the way as the weather was unusually dead flat calm again. The Tohatsu sailpro 6 pushed Teria along at 5 knots and with no range-anxiety at all.  This was just the situation where the reliable fuel miser motor came into its own and made the entire trip feasible in the week long time frame.


The first stop was the bay west of Agnes Island, mentioned in "Cruising the coral coast". The land out here was a bit more windswept and scrub-like. A few km's westward the Thonsborne trail met the sandy beaches tucked under the towering mountains above, if any hikers or boats were there they were unseen, dwarfed by the huge landscape. 




Eva Island, off Cape Sandwich

A light 5 knot SE seabreeze kicked in , so set sail Northwards but was soon motor sailing to keep the speed up and traverse the length of long sweeping beaches with sand dunes. Was able to steer for Eva Islet off Cape Sandwich keeping the motor assisted sails drawing (this reduces revs required and saves fuel)



Decided to take the opportunity and head for Brooke Islands group as the weather was forecast to remain good for the day. These Islands are about 15nm off Cardwell and about halfway to the barrier reef. Way out in exposed waters territory.

Brooke Islands

The Islands formed a beautiful chain of rainforest green humps, laced together with light green coral reef and surrounded by azure blue waters. A magical place that had to be sailed along, slowly ghosting at about 1 knot. Birds were happily living there in the National Park and a marine National park is over the entire area too. One of natures' gems protected.

South of Brooks, a few "reef boats" zoomed by about half mile off, returning from a mornings fishing or diving trip. These are usually about 5-8m long with powerful outboards or inboard engines which can get them out there quickly during the calm mornings and run back downwind when the breeze kicks up (They cost about 3-10 times more than Teria and consume that much more fuel too, but are made for well-funded no-nonsense boaters with limited time afloat. 


Brooke Islands

Teria ghosted along the lee side of the group, slowly passing a barnacle encrusted floating object - a lost divers' flipper, floating for months in the ocean.. Stayed outside pyramid shaped bouys which marked the no anchoring zones near the fringing reefs and anchored for late lunch off a sand cay beach on the Northern end of the small archipelago.

It would have been an amazing place to snorkel, but being solo it was too risky. Only an activity to be done in a buddy system with someone able to operate the boat onboard. (so minimum 3 person crew).

The VHF radio now picked up the crackle of Cairns marine rescue as well as those of Cardwell and Townsville. It was geographically between Townsville and Cairns. At least help if needed was within radio range in all directions here (and no need to last resort of the EPIRB)

The Offshore Islands from this point north are quite different from the ones to the south. These Islands have beautiful dense rain-forest cover, while the southern ones are often windswept scrubby rocks. To the north i could see the Barnard Islands and Dunk Island in the distance. Westward behind Hinchinbrook the Cardwell ranges cloaked in rainforest stretched northwards toward Tully and Innisfail. This area is its own cruising ground with Cardwell as the base ramp.

Beach at Brooke Islands

Hand-steering for long distances like this sure makes an old fella tired, so a good feed, re-hydrate a good recovery nap did wonders. It also brings thoughts of auto-pilots to mind. (like the Raymarine ST1000 tiler pilot..) For now a tiller-brake and remote steering ropes will do. These ropes allow me to sit in the hatchway under the shady bimini/ pop-top and steer from there when motoring.

A bit of afternoon sea-breeze came up about 3pm. So set sail for Gould Island, but with time running out , changed course for the closer Cape Richards. Approached this an hour or so later, running downwind on a broad reach.

Cape Richards

The Cape was the last bastion of permanent human habitation on Hinchinbrook. A classy resort once hid away among the forest overlooking a perfect beach, and it used to welcome yachties at the beach bar in the 1980's Alan Lucas reports in my old CCC. But it is no more today. Nature and economics won out. A cyclone decimated it, and much later a bush fire sadly destroyed what remained of the abandoned ruins. 

Sailed on to the first sheltered embayment near the Cape. Green sea-turtles surrounded Teria, it must have been their sea-grass feeding ground and have never seen so many in one place before! The area looked a potentially exposed to a bit of wave action, so motored a mile or so further along to a National park camp ground on the west shore of Missionary bay. 

National Park anchorage, Missionary Bay

Rounding the final headland there, smoke from a family's beach side fire indicated the first people on shore since Zoe Bay. The sheer scale of Missionary bay was mind blowing. A postcard over water sunset followed by a dome of stars later were other highlights.

Missionary Bay sunset


The other good thing was mobile phone reception returned here. The phone and internet signal had been cut off  since somewhere off Lucinda. So it was nice to catch up with family again and switch the star identifying app, 

The ice in the esky was all melted by now, so ate the last fresh fruit. Started on the dehydated and tinned foods. (the precooked meals lasted first 2 days on ice)










Hinchinbrook Island cruise - Dungeness to Zoe Bay (Day 2)

 Fri 25 Sept 2020.

To comfortably cruise the East Coast of Hinchinbrook in a small boat requires a good weather window. Even before leaving Townsville, the long range weather forecast was watched carefully..on apps like Seabreeze, Willy weather wind. Mostly for the forecast wind and sea heights, also the Bureau of Meteorology (BOM) for synoptic charts which show the isobars and pressure systems affecting wind strengths. September is still middle of the northern dry season so rain was unlikely. Generally SE to NE seabreezes blow most days at 15-20 knots, with winds easing off at night. but passing high pressure systems down south can weaken the winds for a few days.

The wind was forecast light with slight sea for a few days, so decided to visit the east coast first up and hopefully reach the more sheltered waterways off the north coast and Channel before conditions piped up again. Even if daily seabreezes kicked in early they would generally help north bound sailing. but the main problem is finding a calm enough anchorage and not being blown onto a lee shore.

Departed Dungeness early and headed into flat calm conditions under motor. Followed the red nav bouys and fishermen's boats out, then turned and headed past the sugar sheds at 5 knots and followed the 6 km long sugar loading jetty out (as shoal waters closer to the Island) 

Departing Dungeness for Hinchinbrook Island

The channel out of Dungeness

Lucinda sugar sheds, Molasses wharf shed on right

Lucinda sugar jetty

Large Catamaran and powerboat overtake

Lucinda bulk sugar loading terminal, 6 km from land

Set course for Zoe Bay once the shallows were cleared, still flat calm. Had the main up in case any wind came and for awhile a light SW land breeze pushed Teria along silently at 3 knots. The wind shadow of the Island soon had the motor going all the way into Zoe bay.

These videos show the contrast between motoring and sailing. Noisy but fast/reliable vs slow but peaceful.




Anchored off the South Zoe creek entrance and National Park camping ground. Closer than the few cruising catamarans and other yachts.

Took the kayak in and pulled up in the creek near about 4 power boats. Chatted with a bloke in a substantial sized camp, then walked about 1 km through rainforest up to Zoe falls base pool. Then up a steep hillside to the top pools of the falls for great views. A hiking group was up there and had a chat or two, most people like to know where you originated from and how you got there. Solo sailing an 18 fter probably an unusual story. They were on a 5-day trek of the Thonsborne trail, there were quite a few fit middle aged there, so it's not just for the young only. (other groups may have arrived by boat)

Zoe Bay vista

South Zoe falls

Zoe Bay from top of falls lookout

South Zoe creek, camp ground landing

Zoe Bay beach

Motored across the Bay past about 5-6 cruising vessels 30-50 footers, mostly catamarans and one mono hull. The mountain to beach scenery is spectacular, world class. Dropped anchor off North Zoe creek, applied the insect repellent, then explored it with the kayak. It's alot larger than the other creek, with a reasonable tidal entrance for shoal draft boats (has a few scattered coral rocks) bit soon drops into some deep pools among mangroves. 

Met a couple on a Northwind 7 trailer sailer, their boat nestled against the beach. (It's shallower draft than an Investigator, but is a much larger boat at 22 ft loa) they were well prepared for creek anchoring with a pop-top sandfly net (from Canada) and a 12v fan below. Definitely experienced TS cruisers. Their route was similar to my one, anti clockwise out of Dungeness, as the prevailing winds are favorable on the east side and easy to get back against the wind in the sheltered channel. 

Saw a 40 ft Wharram cat anchored further up the creek. A crazy speed boat came out at planning speeds, although the wake was fine in the kayak, it messed with the Northwind TS nosed in on the beach a fair bit with the skipper holding it off while the wake hit them. 

Decided to stay anchored out away from the sandflies. Found the old mosquito net up in the forward locker and draped it over the pop-top. Also lit a mosquito coil in the cabin as usually done and had no problems with the biting insects. 


Mt Bowen, Zoe Bay

North Zoe creek

Regarding boat wakes in anchorages, I've found that the Investigator 563 seems to handle them fairly well and nothing has fallen over dangerously onboard yet (even the lit up Trangia stove, touch wood). Maybe its the permanently low center of gravity of the lead keel of an I 563?