Articles
Western Australia: Swearing at the Wind.... Again!
by Les Allen
I crawled out of my tent rubbing my eyes in the glare. It was hot, sweat
trickled down the front of me soaking my tee shirt and it was 6.30 in the
morning. The sun had just cleared the hills and the glaring rays already had a
sting in them. There was a thick carpet of due over everything and as it burned
off the humidity was around 90%. I was hot, sticky and not very happy; the last
2 weeks had been hell. I was a way for one week with work, flying back home on
the Friday, giving me one week to organise work, the family and get packed for
our latest adventure. In fact I was wondering if the stress was worth it. We
left on the Friday night after work and drove to 1.00am where we stopped for a
few hours sleep before heading off at 6.00am the next morning to drive the last
1,000 km to Dampier. As we got to Dampier we had to stop at the local radio
station to tape an interview and then on to the Dampier Transit caravan park.
The park manager is a lovely lady and she had beers on ice and cooked a lovely
BBQ for dinner that night. This meant staying up socialising which was very
enjoyable but after only a few hrs sleep the night before, very taxing.
The trip we had planned was to paddle out to the Montebello Islands 120km off
the Dampier coast. They consist of more than 100 islands and rocks and gained
international recognition in the 1950?s when the British exploded 3 atomic
weapons on the islands. The trip would take us 90 kilometres south of Dampier, island
hopping off the coast. At Stewart Island we head straight out 60km to Parakeelya
Island in the Lowendow group and finally across to the Montebello group. We pick
up a water drop on Parakeelya spend 8 days on the Monty?s and retrace our steps
back. No one had paddled to the Monty?s before and although we could get lots of
information it was hard to get information we could rely on. Everybody I talked
too had big boats and big motors so the tidal currents were not a problem for
them. Most of the area we were going to paddle in was unsurveyed and we had
heard horror stories of big sharks and tidal currents that would spit us out the
sea ward side where we would be lost at sea.
When you are tired, stressed, and not sure you have all your gear these warnings
play on your mind. The distraction came from a smiling Michelle, the park
manager, carrying hot coffee and starting to cook up bacon, eggs, tomatoes and
sausages for breakfast. Country hospitality both north and south of Perth, the
capital of Western Australia, is truly amazing. After breakfast she drove us
down to the boat ramp to see us off.
Madly setting up shots to film and trying to pack was not improving my temper.
We had to carry over 60 litres of water, 3 weeks food, camping and filming gear. John
and Tel had 2 deck bags and I had 1 big one that covered the back of my kayak.
The cockpit had 10 litres of water in my drinking system an under deck bag full of
day food, sail and split pole either side of my seat and a further 2 -litre emergency
drinking system strapped between my feet. In these hot climates water is life.
When I got in it was a tight squeeze, as I moved my legs under the braces the
pressure on my drinking system squeezed some water out of my drinking straw. If
I went over I had good incentive to roll, as I doubt I could get out easily. I
put my knuckles on the sand and tried to push off. Nothing happened, I was too
heavy. I had to wait for a big wave and move 3 inches, and then wait again.
Eventually I got off and the boat was so low in the water my spray deck was just
clearing the water by 1 inch. The other boats were just as heavy as we headed
out.
About 100 metres off shore John informed us his rudder had just broken so we turned
back. I was fuming under my breath but there was nothing I could do but wait for
John to discover a pin had rattled loose on the drive up and only required
putting back. I was glad it was something simple and felt a lot happier. After a
few minutes of swearing, as John stood on his head and struggled to reach the
front of his cockpit to screw the pin back in, we were ready to go again. As we
rounded East Intercourse Island we picked up the wind wave in the deeper water.
There was a 15kn Easterly blowing right behind us producing a 1-metre lovely wave to
surf. I paddled hard to catch a wave but it passed under me. I did pick up some
speed so on my next try picked up a wave and was off. At the end of my run I was
more under water than on. The next wave washed right over my boat and I felt I
was paddling a submarine. I looked behind and John was really struggling, his
boat was nose diving and yawing on the waves. The Mirage boats Tel and I had
were performing a lot better and it was frustrating to have to wait. It?s also
ironic that before the trip John was twice as fit as we were and could blow us
out of the water with speed, but on the first day because his boat didn?t have
the same buoyancy, he was the slow one.
25km later we could see a strange pyramid on the horizon. It turned out to be
the crane of the McCormack, a huge barge or derrick that had been blown onto the
island in a previous cyclone (hurricane). Later we picked up Eaglehawk Island
itself, which is only about 12 metres above water. This is typical of the islands we
would be visiting. They were formed about 8,000 years ago when the ocean rose to
engulf the land. The islands are the tops of ancient hills protruding from the
water. The whole area we will be paddling in is only 5 to 20 metres deep and
forms the North West Shelf, an area rich in oil and gas. The Monty?s are on the
edge of the shelf and the water drops off sharply on the seaward side of the
island group.
At Eaglehawk we set up camp and I was able to relax and start to get into trip
mode. That afternoon we walked around the island and checked out the McCormack.
It was huge and way up the rocks. Apparently it broke its mooring and was washed
up high on the rocks. The power of cyclones is legendary. Towns built to
withstand them are sometimes almost totally destroyed by there immense power. I
was glad this was the end of cyclone season and that they statistically only
form here about once every 15 years in April. Dead tired, the first day ended as
the sun set.
The next morning I wanted to do some filming at the McCormack before we left.
The tides were running in excess of 4 metres (12ft) so the water was a long way
off at low tide giving us plenty of time to film. I walked across the exposed
reef looking at the myriad of marine life in the shallow pools. There were clams
everywhere and I got some good footage of touching them and watching them try to
squirt water at the intruder. The clams fascinated me as they were in a very
exposed spot. Anyone could just come along and lever them off the reef. I
believe they are good to eat but did not want to destroy these unusual animals
just to see what they taste like. Then it happened. Tel slipped on a rock put
his hand out to balance himself and cut the palm of his hand on rock oysters. He
had 2 cuts from the centre of his palm, to the heal. Not life threatening
injuries but we all new they could get infected and certainly would not heal
while paddling. This was a real blow at this early stage of the trip and it
happened in a blink. How could Tel be so clumsy? I bit my tongue and did not say
anything and actually felt bad about thinking it was his fault, as it could have
happened to any of us. We walked back dressed his hand and started packing.
Three days later we were on Stewart Island. It was typical of all the islands we
had passed. Low limestone base with rocks on all the weathered sides. Usually
there is a small sandy beach in the lee with low scrubby vegetation on a sandy
top. Stewart was about 300 metres long and 200 metres wide with a huge eagle nest on the
highest part. The nest was about 2 metres wide and 1 metre high and made of sticks. This
intrigued me as the as we were 30 km from the shore and there was no twigs on
the island. They must have carried every twig at least 30 km and when I looked
at the size of the nest, and the thousands of sticks, I couldn?t believe it.
We were fortunate in that the beach was very steep and into deep water. This
meant we would not have to carry our boats and gear very far for our early
morning start on the long 60km crossing. I planned the trip so we would have
spring tides on the way out and neap tides on the way in. I figured it would be
bad if the tides stopped us getting out there but a tragedy if we could not get
back. The tides were low at 6.30 am and high at 12.00. This meant most of the
trip we would be pushing into an incoming tide but would have the benefit of an
outgoing for he last few hours. Buoyed by a good weather forecast, giving us
light tail winds we headed off at 6.45 am.
The sea was dead flat and the heat oppressive, as we had not acclimatised to the
heat or the humidity yet. Each day was between 35 and 40 degrease Celsius with
very high humidity in the morning. Even the evenings were hot, with the
temperature dipping only to around 25 degrease. I had allowed 5 litres of water
per day but we were using way over that, in fact, up to 8 litres per day. I was
not concerned though, as we had far more water at our drop than we needed and
had a good safety margin in the amount we carried. We were in high spirits as we
headed out that morning and were making good time. We had no idea how much the
tide was going to effect us as it was coming at 90 degrease on our right first
off and turning a full 180 to be 90 degrease on our left later. We had two GPS
navigators so we could find our tiny target so far away.
A few hours into our paddle we saw the first sea snake. It was the first one I
had seen so close and it frightened me. It was so big, a yellow body as thick as
a man?s arm and 1.5 metres long with a black head. He just seemed to be sunning
himself on the surface. About an hour later Tel gave a startled shout. He had
not noticed a snake till it was just 2 metres from his bow. He turned off at
full ruder as the snake came awake. It?s head came out the water and it went
straight for Tel?s body. His face drained and his eyes were like saucers. As it
got right to him he slapped its head down twice with his paddle. The snake dived
and came up the other side of his boat very angry. Three times Tel franticly
pushed the head under water right next to his hull. Then the snake got fed up
with getting hit on the head and dived, so Tel took the opportunity to paddle
off at a surprising rate. As he pulled away and realised, the snake was not
chasing him any more, he started talking excitedly. ?Did you see that, did you
see it, it came straight at me? ?Unbelievable, it was going straight for me?.
?I had to hit it under, did you see it, then it came up the other side, what a
rush, I though it was going to get me.? ?I?ll just paddle on adrenalins for a
while.? ?Man, I didn?t expect that?. I suddenly noticed I was also paddling flat
out so I backed off and tried to look calm. As the day wore on we saw 5 more
snakes but picked them up early enough to give them a wide berth.
By the end of the day we were 20 degrees off our original heading. We had
plotted our course to take into account the tidal movement, but they were not
playing the game right. We were discovering just how different the tides were
compared to what the chart said. I was very glad we had GPS navigators with us,
and even more glad when we could see the blip on the horizon that was our
island. Tel was complaining about how tired he was and how hard the paddle had
been. We had been pushing hard for 8 hours admittedly and still had an hour to
go, but we certainly had done harder paddles in the past. Also it was out of
character for him to complain. At the end of a hard day he is usually the one
out front encouraging everyone else on. It just goes to show, everyone has bad
days. I put it down to the heat, paddling on a sore hand, the snake incident,
which would have sapped some energy after the adrenalin high and the fact that
we all have highs and lows on an extended trip. At the end of the day he was
waked, and thought the paddle back was pushing the safety margin too far.
We were on the eastern side of the Lowendow islands and only had one 20km jump
to get to the western side of the Monty?s. An easy days paddle, just a doddle in
the park. We started by filming in some of the interesting formations at the
Lowendows. It was getting hard to film as I was being moved by the tides too
much to set up good shots so we headed off to the Monty?s. About 3 km?s off I
suddenly realised we were in trouble. We were being sucked out to sea at a rapid
rate. There was a small rock or island about 2 km away and we set of at full
pace for it. I was paddling at better than 8 km per hour but only making about 3
km per hour head way. It turned out to be a long 2 km. How could we be so
careless? We were experienced paddlers and fell for a basic trap. Even though
the chart was showing unsurveyed waters you would have to be blind Freddy not to
anticipate strong currents and we had all the warning signs while filming. We
would not make that mistake again. We sat in the eddy and waited a couple of
hours for the tide to slacken and then dashed across on the turn of the tide.
This was the first time we experienced strong tidal movement. We were now 120 km
of the coast and had all that huge Basin of shallow water to rush past the
islands into the deep water on the sea ward side of the Monty?s.
We had landed on Archong Island had lunch and were heading off to the southern
end of the Monty?s to find a base camp. As we rounded the island we were
confronted with a huge tidal steam. I had never seen anything like it before. We
had all heard and read about tidal streams but never seen one. What a hoot, just
like white water river paddling. There were eddies, boils, rapids and this was
the ocean. We played, ferry glided, sat in the boils and had a great time. The
warnings about the northern end came back to me. I had talked to a person who
had done seismic surveys in the Monty?s and he told me the northern end had
horrific tidal steams as the islands are shaped like a big funnel. He said there
was 2-metre difference in the water height in spring tides and we would not be able
to paddle against them. I now took his warring very seriously.
We set up camp in front of the Conservation and Land Management hut as this area
had been heavily desecrated over the years and our camping there would not
impact on the pristine areas. The Monty?s are low limestone islands that have
under cut rocky shoreline with little sandy beachers spaced throughout the
islands. They are covered by spinifex ( a low spiky grass type of plant ) and
the occasional acacia thickets or mangrove. Baudin first discovered the islands
in 1801 and was discouraged by the seeming barrenness of the country. He took
7.5 tons of Turtle meat off Barrow Island and set fire to it as he left. This
was the first act of environmental vandalism as unlike the main land, these
island are not fire resistant and fire is a catastrophic event. After Baudin?s
effort pearlers came next and raped the area of all its pearl shell. Worst of
all they introduced cats and black rat to the area. These caused the extinction
of the Golden Bandicoot and the Spectacled Hair-wallaby as well as having a
major impact on all the other fauna that survived. This of cause was out done by
the British who set off 3 atomic weapons over a 10 year period. The millions of
fish, insects and birds that died in the initial blast would pail into
insignificance to the number who would die from radiation poisoning. After that
we found oil and gas so we cleaned up the radiation so we could exploit the oil
and gas. Now we discover it?s a totally unique area of mega diversity because of
its location and the fact there is an overlap of tropical and sub tropical
species. Conservation and Land Management have eradicated the cats and are
working on upgrading the area to a marine park. At least this is a step in the
right direction as there are few places in the world that are like the Monty?s.
Ironically a lot of the money to do scientific surveys is being funded by the
oil companies. It proves that only rich countries can afford good environmental
policies.
As we explored the island we found many interesting spots. One of the best spots
was this little island that was like a mini volcano. The centre was open and had
a lovely little beach you could access it via a cave entrance. We spent an hour
playing in our very own secret ?pirate cave?. It was getting late in the
afternoon and we had had a top day so we set off wandering back to our campsite.
I was out front just dodeling along when I got at strange feeling and out of he
corner of my eye saw a big black shape heading for my boat. At about a 45 degree
angle a huge hammer head shark passed under my boat. It was as round as a 44
gallon drum and 15ft long. I could have reached down and touched it. I was
thinking ?oh my god? then it turned in its body length and came strait back for
my boat. At this point I stoped thinking and my heart was in my mouth. I had
stoped paddling and the shark passed so close I thought the dorsal fin would hit
the boat. It then turned again and passed at the back of the boat missing my
rudder by centimetres only to turn back on my rudder again. After the second
pass it disappeared as fast as it arrived. After a second or two I had control
over my voice again and called the boys over. John thought it was attracted to
the vibrations from my paddle. When it turned back I had stopped paddling, so
then the only turbulence was at the back of my rudder. Once again on the second
pass the boat was stopped and there was no turbulence so he lost interest. Well
that was a good theory but it didn?t stop the shark re visiting me that night in
my dreams. It was one of those experiences I am glad I?ve had but don?t want
again, I?m just not that brave.
We were at the point where we had to make some decisions. Tel?s hand was not
looking good as the cuts were not healing. The flesh either side of the cuts was
white and at the end of each day the cuts were gaping. It was sore the whole
time he was paddling. We were due to paddle back and I was not confident his
hand could take 5 days of hard paddling. Prior to the trip I did a sailing plan,
an emergency rescue plan and an evacuation plan and lodged it with the Water
Police. The cas-evac plan was simple. Bristo helicopters service the rigs and
are set up for cas-evac so they were happy to get us, for a fee, if someone
needed urgent medical attention. The evacuation plan in case of cyclones was
much harder. I wanted to get a lift back on the rig tenders. The oil companies
don?t like tourists, especially crazy ones in sea kayaks. With a lot of hassle
they eventually relented and I had all the contacts and they were informed of
the plan so it would be easy to organise from the water. I do these for all my
trips just so people can?t call us irresponsible. This time was wondering if it
was worth the hassle. We carried satellite mobile phones which are magic. In
range of mobile services they are normal mobile phones and when you are out of
range, snap up the satellite aerial and hey presto communication. I called the
manager of the tenders and he agreed it the risk factor was going to increase we
should come back on the supply barge next Thursday. Great, we now had another 7
days on the Monty?s. We packed up and headed for the northern end to set up a
base camp there. We were into neap tides so it would be ok.
That night we heard there was a cyclone off Darwin which was 2,000km away so we
weren?t overly worried just made a note to keep an eye on it. We camped in
lovely spot on the north western tip of the Monty?s. It is the most beautiful
end of the islands and there was excellent surf on the seaward side of the
islands. We made plans to go surfing the next day and then wander over to one of
the bomb sites. That night the cyclone warning was down to Cape Levique and
heading our way. Now we were worried. I rang the duty forecaster who said it was
going out to sea and they did not expect it to come down the coast. But we still
had a cyclone north of us. At 3.am John got up for a pee and listened to the
forecast. The warning was still for Cape Levique and that was still 1000 km away
so he went back to sleep. The next morning we had a top time surfing the west
end. There was a 2 to 3 metres break along the ?U? shaped reef. This meant you
could get on the shoulder and provided you cut left you ended up in deep water.
We arrived back at camp exhausted and elated. Chatting away we packed up and
headed over to the bomb site on Trimouille Island. We arrived about 11.30 and
John switched on the radio for a forecast. The cyclone warning was for us. We
were now very worried.
I rang the duty forecaster again. He said it was heading down the coast very
fast, averaging over 20km per hour. The forecast for the next day was 20 to 30
knot South Easterlies in the morning with possible gales later on. We were now
130 km from the coast on low lying islands that offer no protection with a fast
moving, strengthening cyclone bearing down on us. OH SHIT. Why does unseasonable
weather and wind always follow me! I rang the Dampier Police to let then know
where we were and what we were doing. They had our sailing plan and were happy
we reported in as I said we would. I think they were a little pissed off though.
They just had two sea rescues last week where a crew man fell of a tanker and
drowned before they got to him and a yacht had run aground on an island south of
us and need rescuing. Now they had a cyclone heading for an oil field and
possibly their own town.
We were over 30 km from Veranus the oil installation that was our evacuation
point and we had a 15kn head wind that would probably strengthen. We were
looking down the barrel of a long hard paddle into the night. Fortunately as
part of my plan I had the coordinates of Veranus in the GPS so we could find it
at night without a problem. There was a small pearl farm at the Monty?s who new
we were there so we headed there to tell them we were bugging out. As we
approached a seaplane was just lifting off. The owner of the farm called us
over, as he was very worried about us. They were evacuating immediately and the
first plane load had already left. He didn?t think we would make Veranus in our
sea kayaks and offered to give us a lift as far as he could on his 40ft jet cat.
We didn?t need a lot of persuading. We lifted the boats up fully loaded onto the
deck and were off at 20 knots. The miles were flying by and we were now very
sure we would make Veranus that afternoon. He dumped us into the ocean almost
there and headed straight back to the farm to set up cyclone moorings before the
next evacuation. To say we were grateful is an understatement.
As we approached Veranus a helicopter buzzed us with the pilot gesturing for us
to go straight to the loading dock as fast as we could. As we approached there
was a rig tender tied up. The captain shouted that he was leaving in 5 minutes
and we were to haul our boats over the stern right now. Once again we dragged
fully loaded boats on the deck of the huge boat. I was amazed we had the
strength to do that actually. The helicopter pilot popped his head over the rail
and said he was glad we made it as he was scheduled in half an hour to go and
winch us from the water. Loosing our boats was not a good thought. Then again
nor was loosing our life. 5 minutes later the boat left with the captain gunning
it up to 14knots. I asked him why the urgency and he in formed me he once left
it too late and had a horror trip back and would never do that again. Cyclones
are just too unpredictable and he was not going to die at sea. I must admit, it
was not that long ago 3 ships were lost with all hands in cyclone just south of
here, when it intensified and caught people out.
Our adventure was over, the last 100km back to shore was spent in an air
conditioned cabin sipping coffee and eating. We arrived back late that night and
I rang the Police to let them know we were safely back on shore. They were
actually complimentary and said if everyone did some preparation like us their
job would be easy. Next trip, I won?t complain about doing sailing plans as they
work, and people didn?t think we were irresponsible. The next day there were 4
metre
seas and high winds at the islands so we were glad to be packed up and driving
home. This was different to all the other trips I have done, and it was a shame
it was cut short, but in hind, site just as exciting and enjoyable. Les Allen