Auf Wiedersehen

Yesterday, after some hiking in Shakespeare park, meeting the cows and taking pictures of Imagine from the height, we chilled out. After lunch time we moved to Arkles Bay only 1 mile away. Then it was time to chill some more. Silke thought Fabian should look a little more civilized, so she gave him a hair cut. In the evening we took the dinghy ashore and walked up the hill to the Thai restaurant for dinner. We had a beautiful view of Imagine out in the bay from our table. We got back to Imagine in time to see another wonderful sunset.

This morning we all went ashore and walked up the hill to the bus stop,Fabian and Silke with their heavy backpacks and B and I with our trolley full of laundry (boat life!). Arrived at the bus stop it was time to say goodbye, Fabian and Silke flying to LA for some ofher new adventures and B and I walked to the laundromat.

After returning to Imagine and having lunch we set off to round the peninsular to anticipate the southwest winds and make water on the way . By 3:30 pm we anchored in Tindalls, and already started to plan work on Imagine again. No more holiday for us!

Sunset

We left two house bay, did a little fishing and ended up in Farmers Bay. It’s a nice little bay that we had to ourselves.

Friday once again we tried fishing with no luck. This time we anchored at Motuketekete island. This island is privately-owned and is currently up for sale. We swam ashore and check out the beach and little house on the island. After the swim back it was relax time. By this time the tide was out and B had seen the oysters on the rocks so while Fabian and Silke prepared dinner, we went ashore and harvested a few oysters. I don’t like them but B couldn’t get enough.

This morning the sea was like a mirror reflecting the sky. We motored to Shakespeare Bay on Whangaparao Peninsula. We stopped several times to fish but still nothing for dinner. B took the opportunity to take a swim with the little penguins,in the clear turquoise color, still ocean water.

Being a weekend Shakespeare bay has plenty of boats and jetskiis making it noisy and choppy. But we can’t always have a bay to ourselves. This afternoon B sketched the view while the rest of us just chilled. After dinner we sat and watched the sunset.

The Beast arrived

Monday morning after a swim and breakfast Silke and Fabian explored the shipwreck in the bay, while B and I did a few jobs on Imagine. It was nearly lunch time when they came back and we were ready to haul anchor. We motored across to Beehive Island and had a picnic on the beach. We left the island, heading into deeper water to try fishing. Again there were lots of little ones but no keepers.

Bostaquet bay on Kawau Island was sheltered from the wind and swell. We thought we were going to have the bay to ourselves, but no. In came The Beast. A 131ft twin hull launch and its 39ft tender. Michael Hill (a famous NZ jeweler) named it The Beast because it was not a pretty boat.

Tuesday morning after some stretching on deck, Silke and Fabian went off in the kayak to explore the bay. By the time they got back the wind had got up and it was time to move. A short trip around the corner took us to Mansion House Bay where we chilled out for the rest of the day. It was interrupted by a trip to shore for an Ice-cream and a couple of swims.

This morning B tried to fix the paint cracks caused by the crain strap while they hauled Imagine back in the water and the other two went hiking on Kawau.

Again the afternoon was chilling and swimming, B created one unique piece to add to her shells jewelry collection.

This evening started with a facial mask for everyone (courtesy from Fabian and Silke). Followed by a glass of Moët et Chandon Champagne…Happy Valentines Day!

The Pirate life

It’s Carnival season in Germany. For this year Silke and Fabian didn’t need much time to decide what they were going to be. PIRATES obviously… or as Andrew and B call them crew members. After the successful ice cream heist in Colville on Friday, we set sails for Rakino where we spent the night. Saturday morning we head up to Tiritiri, trying some fishing on our way but obviously PIRATES are not so good at fishing so we had chicken Korma.

While Silke and Fabian explored the birds and lighthouse of Tiritiri Island, Andrew and B further painted the outside of Imagine. To make sure the paint stays on, we took off to Swan Bay and got lots of spray and rain on the fresh coat…Now it looks like a leopard dress, anyway it needed a second layer, and that will be for later.

After shopping for veggies and fruits in Whangaparaoa today we took Imagine out at 20 knots of wind to play around with the new steering and head for the ship wreck Bay in Moturekareka. Silke and Fabian were more than happy to take the helm as well and learn more about sailing at high wind.

We arrived there just on time for exploring the beach at low tide, B was hoping for some nice oysters but they were too small and warmed up by the sun.

Finally, as every good Pirate: we had drinks for sunset…Cheers!

Icecream

Yesterday we stayed at Rangipukea Island, even though a few boats came into the bay during the day. After breakfast we all went ashore where I showed Fabian and Silke how to get oysters off the rocks. The oysters were for bait. B put 1 in the bucket for every 2 she ate. Silke and Fabian did Yoga exercises while B and I went and climbed the islands hills. After lunch Fabian and I went off in the dinghy to do some fishing with the oysters. We came back with one good size Snapper for today’s lunch.

This morning started with no wind, but that didn’t stop us. We started motoring north fishing on the way and sailing the rest of the way. We stopped at Happy Jack’s Island for lunch, then headed across to Colville Bay. We took the dinghy ashore and walked to the Convenience Store for fruit, bait and of course an Ice-cream.

Cruising Coromandel

Tuesday 6th

Yesterday we climbed to the top of one of the islands and then tried fishing again. We caught several small Snapper but nothing we could keep. That meant it was hotdogs for lunch. We found a sheltered spot next to a busy bay, where we relaxed for the afternoon. By evening the bay had emptied out so we moved in for the night.

This morning we started with me climbing the mizzen mast to do repairs on a light. It took 4 of us to pull me up the mast, Silke to pass on my calls ( “up” or “down”), Fabian and B controlling the electric winch. Then Silke and Fabian had a go at climbing the main mast to check out the view. Determined to catch lunch, we motored out to deeper water and anchored. B hooked the first big snapper followed by Fabian (we had them tonight for dinner). Happy with that we have moved to Rangipukea Island and relaxed for the afternoon. It’s hard work fishing and laying in the sun. B and I went for a walk on the beach, before a swim off the back of Imagine. We now have the island to ourselves.

Storm is coming

There was a storm predicted to hit Auckland this afternoon (Friday) through to Saturday, so we made the most of the nice morning. Starting with a swim before breakfast. We then piled into the dinghy and headed ashore to check out the town. We caught the bus from Onetangi to Onerowa (Waihekes city).
It only took an hour to visit all the shops in Onerowa, so we stayed for lunch at a restaurant overlooking the bay. By the time we had got back to the beach and dinghy, the storm had started. This made getting back to Imagine fun. We all stripped down to our undies and launched the dinghy into the 1m waves rolling onto the beach. We were waist high in water before we could climb on board. Even on board we weren’t safe from the waves as some crashed over the bow, filling the dinghy. We made it back to Imagine, laughing all the way. It had been such a nice calm morning.
The wind had stayed the same direction but the swell was now curving around the point making it uncomfortable as Imagine rocked from side to side. Once again we hauled anchor and headed for a more sheltered bay. All the bays on the eastern side were full of boats but we managed to get into Huse bay and be out of the wide for the night.
Saturday we went ashore with blue sky above us. In the few minutes it took to get to shore a big rain cloud came over the hill and drenched us. That put an end to the walk on the beach. With the storm still blowing hard and predicting to turn south, we decided to head for another bay. When we reached Chamberlains bay there was only four other boats there. By evening there were twenty. 
This morning we set sail without having a morning swim. The sky was blue and 10kts of wind off the beam,so making it a nice sail to Coromandel. We stopped just off Rangipukea Island for some fishing, but only caught small undersized snapper. We moved on and have anchored off Whanganui island. Swims and sunbathing were the order of the afternoon.

Holiday time

Yesterday was hectic. Putting the boat back together and cleaning up ready for the new crew that arrived late afternoon.

Fabian and Silke weren’t on Imagine long before they jumped in the water for a swim. We then had a “welcome on board” drinks and a long chat over diner.

Today after our early morning swim we had breakfast, followed by the traditional safety briefing. We then hauled anchor and set sail to Waiheke island. Fabian took the helm for part of the way. Four hours later we were having lunch in Onetangi Bay. Straight after lunch we were back in the water snorkelling around the nearby rocks, not much to see but enough exercise for the day and make lie down on deck in the sun and rest. Holiday started!

We have steering

The first job this morning was to fit the new Gipsy to the anchor winch. The lite rain didn’t help but it went on easy. We had just got everything ready for starting the hydraulic steering when Greg and his daughter Elo arrive to help. I checked the piping was connected as per the instructions and started to fill the system. B turned the the helm to port as Greg poured the hydraulic fluid into the helm. I was in the back releasing the bleed nipples. The port one was open but nothing happening? So I closed it and opened the starboard one. Big mistake. The fluid was under pressure, resulting in me getting a shower of fluid.

We stopped and checked. There was a misprint in the diagram. So I swapped the port and starboard pipes over and we started again. After filling the system and fixing a couple of joint that leaked under pressure we had steering.

Next we set up the Rockner Anchor on the new chain and Gipsy so it could easily be deployed. Then B drove Imagine forward while Greg and I manually pulled up the rope holding temporary anchor we had been using. Once up we headed out into the bay to do a few maneuvers to make sure the steering was working.

We then returned to our place of anchor and was able to use the winch to deploy the anchor with the new chain.

B and I spent the rest of the afternoon tidy up tools , cleaning the mess everywhere, reconnecting everything … A lot to do still before the arrival of some new crew this week but we are looking forward to it so we can stop working and get some sailing holiday.

Sorry no photos we were too busy.

See you later Cobber

Its been a busy week. Lydia had no holiday. She just got stuck in and helped remove the old steering and install the new one. A friend Rodger helped us making the brackets in his shed for the new rudder ram. We still have to run the hydraulic pipes (tomorrow). In-between Lydia installed the new autopilot and rewired the raymarine system. B continued with the painting and also made a bird scarer, as the birds were rusting on the railings at night and shiting on her new paint.

This morning started with saying see you next time to Lydia as she had to fly back to Brisbane. Next was exercise with Mollie. We took my brothers family dog for a walk this morning and a play on the beach. I had to go pick up the new Gipsy that matches the new anchor chain. That took all afternoon as the traffic was so bad. We have a busy weekend ahead as we have to finish everything off in time for the new crew arriving.