O.K. so now it is June 23 and after another really long and tiring stint in the air, we have arrived back at
Another day in a boater's life! We've had a beautifully quiet night anchored in the middle no-where of
O.K. so now it is June 23 and after another really long and tiring stint in the air, we have arrived back at
Another day in a boater's life! We've had a beautifully quiet night anchored in the middle no-where of
Wow, I can't believe how far behind I am in recording all of the wonderful things we've been doing here in
The Whitsunday area is a nice boating destination directly across from
Finally we got into the water again for some diving and although the visibility wasn't great, the underwater life is definitely wonderful and diverse. This is a popular tourist destination, so the local dive operators feed the fishes in order to give their clients lots to see……But…then these fishes expect that "everybody" should feed them. One very large giant trevally (type of fish) decided that my hand was food and grabbed a large chunk out of it! Besides hurting like crazy, now I am bleeding profusely…."Shark!" enters my mind. So, here I am, diving, one hand clasping tightly over the other to prevent bleeding and trying to carry on enjoying my dive (we had just entered the water). I'm here to tell the tale, so obviously survived.
When Oso Blanco rejoined us on anchor, we all decided that with a calm window of weather for the next few days, we would head out to the outer reef, some 25 miles from the Whitsunday Group. We anchored behind Line Reef across from Hook Reef, which we could find because of our chart plotters, but that was not visible to the eye until the lowest of low tide. To somebody looking at us, you would think that we were anchored in the middle of the ocean. It made me recall the question that so many people asked us when we first left
The main resort island of the Whitsunday Group is