ADVENTURES AT SEA
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Brad Avery
Editor’s note: This is the second in a five-part series on OCC’s Alaska
Eagle’s 2,300-mile journey from Tasmania to New Zealand.
o7 Jan. 18, 54 South 161 East aboard Alaska Eagle.f7
It’s a beautiful day in the Southern Ocean, with a 30-knot southwesterly
pushing us through big lumpy seas toward the Auckland Islands 100 miles
away. Alaska Eagle is running along at a steady 10 knots with a reefed
main, staysail and small jib topsail out on the pole.
We spent the last two days anchored off the research station at
Subantarctic Macquarie Island, where we were the first yacht to visit in
more than three years. Soon after we dropped anchor we were invited to
dinner and met on shore by Louise, leader of the 40-person staff of the
Australian National Antarctic Research Expedition.
It turned out that Louise and several other station members were keen
sailors and enjoyed seeing Alaska Eagle sail past in gusty conditions
before we dropped anchor.
Dinner at the station’s comfortable dining hut was full of good food and
conversation. We enjoyed learning about the interesting research being
conducted on the island’s flora, fauna, and geology. It was great to meet
40 scientists and graduate students who couldn’t be happier with their
self-imposed exile at one of the world’s remotest islands. We discovered
that Macquarie, now a World Heritage site, is an exceptional island.
A lone sentinel in the Southern Ocean, Macquarie lies 900 miles south of
Tasmania in the path of the West Drift, on the edge of the Antarctic
Convergence Zone. Eighteen miles long by three miles wide, the island
runs north and south, presenting a slender barrier against the westerly
storms that march relentlessly around the world. The only other places
that share the same latitude are Cape Horn and South Georgia Island. The
weather is wet, windy, and cold year-round, with a mean temperature of 40
degrees. Rain falls about 25 days a month and strong winds are recorded
22 days a month.
The Macquarie Nature Reserve is home to millions of King, Royal, Gentoo
and Rockhopper penguins. Thousands of huge sea elephants and fur seals
also inhabit the island’s narrow rocky beaches and tussock grasslands.
Along with 68 other species of birds, the endangered Wandering Albatross
nests along the island’s steep coastal slopes.
The morning following our dinner ashore provided unusual weather: light
winds and sunshine. It was good hiking weather, and Alaska Eagle rode
easily in the exposed anchorage at Buckles Bay.
Keith and Kerri of the Tasmanian Parks and Wildlife Service met nine of
us on the beach for a rugged 15 mile hike. We hiked up to the island’s
1,200 foot plateau, down to a research hut at spectacular Bauer Bay on
the West Coast, then back over the top of the island to Sandy Bay, home
to a huge Penguin rookery.
From Sandy Bay, we spent an incredible two hours walking back to the
research station through thousands of penguins and giant sea elephants.
Against the steep cliffs overhead, Albatrosses and Skuas roamed the sky.
We arrived back tired, but on schedule for a roasted lamb dinner at the
station, this time with linen tablecloths and candlelight. Between the
incredible pristine beauty of the island and the quality of life of its
human inhabitants, it was easy to see why the Macquarie Islanders wished
to stay beyond their allotted 13 month tours of duty.
One day of good weather is all one can hope for at 54 degrees south. By
the time dinner was finished, a rain-filled, bone-chilling southerly had
set in, making our dinghy ride back to Alaska Eagle cold and wet.
After a lumpy night in the anchorage, which required both heaters and an
anchor watch, we hoisted anchor in the morning and sailed away just as
the clouds were clearing and the breeze shifted to a 30-knot
southwesterly. Looking astern beyond our wake and the foaming sea, the
sun shone on Macquarie’s green cliffs and rolling plateau. It could have
been Catalina after a rain-filled spring; but the Catalina Channel rarely
looks like the churning Southern Ocean after a front has passed.
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The OCC sailing program is dedicated to providing offshoresailing
instruction to the public. Alaska Eagle, a former Whitbread Round the
World Race, was donated to OCC in 1982. Since then, the aluminum sloop
has sailed more than 200,000 miles with hundreds of OCC sailing program
students aboard.
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