28/10/2020

Last night I dreamt of my grandma. She was still very skinny, but she’s able to talk and walk. I took her out to the street to search for a sort of delicious street food, the name I can’t remember now. We were all excited. But while we were waiting for the bus, I leaped into another dream.

We left the Great Keppel island at 7a.m. It start with southwest wind, then a southeast wind, which was blowing from the direction we were heading towards, so we had to tack around and wait for it to become an east one or better from northeast, but it was very steady at the moment. The merit of the southeast wind is it is cold and dry and can blew away all those damp clouds.

It turned easterly in the afternoon, making it easier or us to move to the southeast. Dark clouds were forming behind us but it’s still clear ahead. Wondered if our Mustang can outrun the overcast clouds.

The wind turned northeast around 3pm, making it more favorable for us. We dodged the storm for now.

At 4-5pm another storm formed behind us while wind weakened a lot. Only 2-3 knots of speed. Luckily it was only the tail end of the storm that caught up with us. When it passed by, it only languidly scattering a few drops of rain and left an orange mist. The sky reappeared with the setting sun and double rainbows. Wind picked up too. After a perfect escape from the storm, Mustang took off again.

I made Singapore noodles for dinner. I was too hungry to take pictures.

After dinner the last gust of strong wind blew over and then almost stopped. Distance lightning kept flashing, although the bright moon was still above our head. Before 10pm we dropped all sails and drifted in the water. Only the current carried us slowly towards southeast. Wind picked up a bit around 11pm, we raised the sails and moved again at 4 knots.

Mercury moonbeams scattered through clouds to the sea from time to time. Later the sky was mostly clear. The waves reflecting moonlight looked like silver wheels trod by giants. Tonight I was not sleepy at all, even feeling too excited, probably because I was still in the aftermath from the previous stormy night, and the lightning was still striking high up in front. Plus clouds that looked ordinary during the day could look a bit scary at night… At 3:30am the moon was sinking, like an orange lantern missing one corner. Sky would be brighter in about an hour as sunrise was scheduled at around 5am.

I went to sleep at 4am and woke up at 7am. Turned out to be a beautiful day, only the wind was a little too moderate and the boat was moving slowly, so we changed our plans, not heading to Rooney Point but redirected towards Bundaburg instead.

Night sailing was not always easy, but it makes you face the darkness and the unknown directly. Being through the darkest moment you embrace the dawn, and you become a braver and more determined human being.

27/10/2020

We went to visit Rory in the morning and picked up a some little fish from his dinghy(they jumped into it) for breakfast. He’s excited about the likelihood that the US will have a normal human as new president next week.

Afterwards we went up to the island and picked some coconuts. One of them was green and fresh, with lots of water in it and a layer of thin gel like coconut meat.

J found the contact details of Steve, the previous previous previous owner of Mustang. J gave him a call. He told us about Mustang. Ted, the owner before him, had sailed Mustang from the US to Australia, and Ted sounds an interesting guy too, a surfer, a healthy eater, always naked on the boat, sailing in wetsuit and goggles in rough seas (before the dodger was built).

We moved to the south of the island in the afternoon. Storm again in the evening and we all thought three days in a row was a bit too much. Spaghetti for the dinner.

26/10/2020

Today, Rory guided us to explore a ruin on the island. There is a deserted holiday resort, built in the 70’s, in its prime in the 90’s. People used to say “Get Wrecked on Great Keppel”, now it is a real wreckage. The whole area is surrounded by wire fence, which has a few holes to get in. Inside the ruin, junk scattered everywhere, plants growing among them, walking through them is like walking in a Chernobyl neighbourhood that has been re-invaded by vegetation. In 2018, the resort was re-purchased for redevelopment, and some old buildings were demolished before the project came to a halt and was abandoned again. Recently, the government seems planning to rebuild the resort again. We saw a grumpy old guy cleaning up the rubbish inside little by little. Throughout the scattered furnitures, facilities and metal parts, everything could be stripped down by the boaties to bring back to their boats for recycling, they call this place Bunnings. Rory picked up a piece of thick aluminium sheet, which was just what he needed for his boat. Yesterday afternoon two sheds in the resort were deliberately set on fire and we saw police come by dinghy to investigate. It is said that there is a hermit in his 80s, hiding from everyone, living in the deserted resort on the hill. I wonder if he know anything about the fires…

Rory treated us double sized burgers after the tour, and I was so hungry that I gobbled up the whole burger into my stomach. I also had an icecream after that. I surprised Rory. Indeed the contrast between my appetite and my size has shocked a lot of people.

It stormed again in the evening. La Nina did return.