Robe
2/3/16 to
10/3/16
If by grand design Robe could be helicoptered
to a location closer to Adelaide it would be a pre-eminent destination for
cruising yachts in SA waters. As it is the lonely expanse of ocean stretching
beyond Kangaroo Island, which we call the Blue Paddock, plus the gnarly waters
of Backstairs Passage that mark its preamble keep most vessels away, apart from
those transiting to the East, or making West from Victorian waters. To the East
the mere mention of the phrase Bass Strait, keeps even hardened salts from
venturing beyond Eden. And for good reason.
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The quaint Port of Robe |
Then there are the Sou-Easters in summer, the
Devil Wind. Gaps in the Devil Wind have been as rare as compassion in Syria. We
were exceeding fortunate to get to Robe when we did, but then getting out of
Robe to head Sou-East into the prevailing wind has proved to be another
challenge of its own. Through summer and now lingering into early autumn, the
Sou-Easters have beset the coastline of SA with a dominant high pressure system
squatting like a sumo wrestler off Western Australia, feeding a constant ridge
of pressure gradients into SA waters where they compress along the coast
ushering in our whistling nemesis, the Devil Wind. High pressure systems that
sit out in the Tasman and bring northerlies to SA, and hence respites from the
SE’s have been rare this year. In March though, the approaching change of
season normally brings with it softer airs more conducive to yacht travel. So
far we are still waiting.
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View of lake Butler Marina from the boardwalk on the way into town. |
After a traversing the Blue Paddock and
dodging the Cray-pots that dot the marine horizon in these parts, we approached
the harbour at Robe, keeping Snewin Reef to port, South Reef to starboard, and
following the channel inside the breakwater to the modern and welcoming
shipping basin in Lake Butler. In no time Michael Wilkin the affable harbour
officer was aboard to complete our arrival formalities and inform us that for
the princely sum of $44 for our first night, and $22 a night for subsequent
nights we had the keys to marina facilities, hot showers attached to the nearby
Yacht Club, and almost keys to the city. Michael is a rare multi-tasking male,
being de-facto Harbour Master, local inspector, impounder of stray hounds,
travel lift operator for hauling out fishing vessels, and most importantly,
go-to person for visiting sailors needing transport into town for heavier
haulage. His offer that “if you need help...ring me” was genuinely given and
later, would prove invaluable. With obtuse weather on the way, including the
threat of thunder and storms from a broad sub-tropical trough, we settled into
a lifestyle that we will admit was passing comfortable. You could easily get
attached to Robe.
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Helpful Michael (on right) took us all into town to refuel. |
In summer Robe and its delights are no longer
a secret. Hordes of visitors from Adelaide’s leafy and prestigious postcodes
descend on this outport, and as it bursts at the seams it could easily be
re-named Burnside-By-The-Sea. To be seen in Robe is de rigour. Happily Robe is
quieter now although in town the number of cafés and boutiques that have
sprouted there to cater for the desires of the transients is impossible to
miss. You would be awash if you took coffee in all of the places it is
available along Mundy Terrace, the main drag. It could be re-named Latte Lane.
Dotted everywhere in Robe are the grand old
buildings from its halcyon days of commerce and trade in the 1800’s. They give
the town its charm, its links to its past and ample opportunity for buildings
of yore to be converted to boutiques, eateries, galleries and fine places in
which to repose. Tales from Robe’s colourful past abound with a favourite of
mine being the insanely clever customs scam that could be dubbed the great Chinese takeaway. Robe was in
its infancy when gold was discovered at Bendigo and Ballarat in Victoria, and
when news of this got out, wannabe fortune hunters from around the world
descended on the port of Melbourne, including a large number of Chinese who
brought with them their curious appearance, customs and language, causing alarm
in an Anglo colony where the embracing of multi-culture was aeons away. To
deflect the “celestials” the Victorian Government slapped a ten pound Poll Tax,
on every new arrival from China and smugly believed that the Chinese invasion
had been averted. To this move to “stop
the boats”, Robe responded a treat, by advertising a one pound entry duty for Chinese arrivals, plus the offer to show
the newcomers the way overland to the diggings, out of South Australia and into
Victoria. Robe got the money, Victoria got the Chinese – via the back door and
by the thousands. Sweet for Robe, sour for the Victorians - who were furious. Was
the “take-away” of Adelaide’s Formula 1 Grand Prix, by the Victorians, a
century later a case of the Vics getting even?
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Former Governors residence overlooking the marina. |
As we arrived we happened upon good Port
Elliot and Surf Club friends Rod and Janet Ellis, who were coincidentally in
town for a few days with a group of colleagues from the South Coast, with most
drawn to local links for a regional golf tournament, whilst non-players, like
us, immersed themselves in the languid life of Robe. We joined Rod Janet at
what we could term a familiarisation evening
at The Cally which is
Robe-speak for the Caledonian Inn, and succumbed to their invites for us to
join the group at the local Pasta eatery and again at The Cally on subsequent
nights. Hearing of our unusual mode of travel to Robe, their questions about
our life afloat led us to offer a tour of our modest ship, which, to our great
surprise, drew universal appeal. On board Calista
the following morn they were surprised, we think, to find out how much
living space we actually have below, and were fascinated by the systems on
board that combine to give us a life on the sea.
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The Caledonian Inn " The Cally" |
Soon, Rod, Janet and their golfing friends
departed, but we could not. Needing around 30 hours of viable winds to make it
to Port Fairy, we got glimpses of opportunities, but as if on cue, the
Sou-Easters filled in again and we were confined to port.
It would be wrong however to assume that in
Robe we had descended into the hedonistic lifestyle of the summer entourage.
After weeks of preparation, we arrived at Robe with a list of “boat jobs” to
do. Some we will admit tested our patience, our technical skills and our
ability to manage our frustration at so
many things failing, so early in our journey. Tracking down the failed
Navigation Lights saw us hunting down and eliminating a list of prime suspects
until we found the culprit in the anchor locker where a re-wire of the leads to
the port and starboard nav-lights was needed. Threading the new wires up under
the toe-rail via a hole we drilled to access the stanchion piping, and
threading up the new leads to the light in the confined working space up forward
tested all but our resolve. We were delighted to see that amongst the South
Coast visitors was former Victor Harbor sailor and Auto Electrician Bill
Discombe. Whilst the “tour” of Calista was
occurring Bill was keener to head to the pointy end of the ship and, armed with
our multi-meter, to give us some specialist advice re our works in progress.
His master class left us with some crucial ohm work to do in our
re-instillations.
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Success at last ... We have nav lights! |
With the essential navigation lights back in
action, our equanimity was challenged by other malfunctions such as: the
wavering gas supply to our stove, a new “G Deck” entertainment system that chose
to go on the blink, a new water pump that was misfiring and a tap in the vanity bowl in the “Head” that
continued to drip…drip…drip…in spite of new washers and being patted. The bloke
from GME caused a pyroclastic response from the Admiral when, from his
air-conditioned office in Sydney he suggested that we “just drop it back to
them”!! Changing to a new gas bottle seemed to avert deeper problems with our
newly-installed gas regulator and solenoid safety switch, but in spite of
multiple dismantlings, the tap continued, in spite of our interventions to
drip…drip…drip. One of the questions we fielded from our visitors was…”what do
you do all day?” You go from port to port fixing your boat, that’s what you do.
These frustrations might have driven a less
resilient crew to the bottle, and as if on cue opportunities to down tools and do
exactly that were growing and not receding. First, Brian and Maree, whose cat Urchin had shared the Blue Paddock with
us bound for Robe, invited us on board for a stern barbecue alongside long-term
locals Michael and Verity, owners of Cloud
Nine a trim Duncanson 26 Yacht, moored permanently in the basin. Our foray
into boat ownership started with a Duncanson 26 Crystal Voyager in 2000, so we immediately had things in common to
share. Being local vignerons, we supped royally as Mick related some of the
background to Robe’s fine marina including the hard to realise fact that the
development was not universally welcomed by locals when it was first proposed.
A fear of the unknown we suppose brought on this response, although we would
lay odds that, judging by the constant traffic at the commercial wharf and the
boat ramp, the facility have universal acclaim these days.
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Brian & Maree's lovely catamaran Urchin. |
Long-time friends of ours, Bill and Tammy
Mallyon, are the only Robe locals that we know. They have restored Dingley Dell the charming cottage of 19th
Century bard, Adam Lindsay Gordon, on the outskirts of town. Bill and Tammy now
oscillate between this rural icon and a cliff-top cottage with breathtaking
views above Whalers Bay on Thistle Island, some 20 odd miles offshore from Port
Lincoln. Last summer Tammy was the driving force – with Bill proving a dab hand
on the griddle – at the Retro-Look Coastal
Kitchen caravan that did a roaring trade on Long Beach, and at events such
as Robe’s “be there or be square” New Year’s Eve celebrations. We have it on
authority – Bill is an authority - that international visitors came to SA this
year, not for the Tour Down Under, but to make it to Robe for one of Tam’s
famous Pulled Pork Rolls. Check out the latest edition of SA Life to see Tammy and her Coastal Kitchen in centrefold. Now via
landline we found that Bill and Tammy were flying back to Robe, and that yet
another visit to The Cally was in the
offing. The staff of this watering hole has suggested that if we stay in town
much longer we will have to join the pub social club and enter The Cally 2016 Footy Pools, the surest
test there is to being judged a de facto local. It was great re-connecting with
Bill and Tammy and yes, another tour of our ship ensured, to allow Tammy’s mum
to come aboard for an admittedly modest morning tea by Coastal Kitchen standards.
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Great to have the Mallyon's on board. |
And…still the SE’s persisted, but maybe with
not the fervour of earlier days. We had been in close contact with good friends
Rod Hunter and Craig Westlake, who with Rod’s friend Bob Sobels were in the
process of delivering Craig’s recent purchase, the 38’ Bavaria Yacht Force Majeure to Hobart. Rod is one of SA’s most accomplished
yachtsmen and Craig was in good hands with Rod calling the shots on Force across these complex expanses of
oceans. Just when we thought our social program was levelling out, Force entered the marina after a tiring
haul from Kangaroo Island to greet us with the immortal line “good to see
you…what are you doing tonight?...why don’t we go to the pub”. Indeed.
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Neighbours.....Calista & Force Majeure |
With the social whirl enveloping our ship
there was a danger that having arrived as passengers, we would depart as cargo.
We attempted to offset these excesses by taking vigorously to the boardwalk
into town: embarking on the cliff walks that head south from the marina; by
rowing our tender around the marina, and by taking to the waters of Karatta
Beach, just abeam of the marina, for what turned out to be some enervating
immersions in the ocean. Crisp! Having left the comparatively tepid waters of
Horseshoe Bay Port Elliot, the waters of Robe were merciless and cruel. Luckily
our forays into the sea were followed by hot showers at the adjacent Robe Yacht
Club, whose facilities were thankfully accessible to us as visitors.
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Rowing into the village of Robe |
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Scenic boardwalk around the marina into town |
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Crisp waters on the swimming beach adjacent to the marina ! |
Maybe Rod Craig and Bob brought marine
fortune with them, for no sooner had Force
Majeure arrived than a day of calmer conditions to Port MacDonnell and
beyond to Portland and Port Fairy emerged from the forecast. We would need
about 30 hours of agreeable weather to make it to Port Fairy or Portland and at
last a good forecast held. The stormy conditions had headed east and all we
needed to do was to refuel and prepare for sea. Here the generous help of
Michael Wilkin came to our rescue, and courtesy of the Council Inspector’s
vehicle we lumped an array of jerry cans from Urchin, Force Majeure and Calista
to and from the refuelling facility, on the opposite side of the basin.
We were ready to go, but not prepared for
what the morning of our departure was about to deliver.
Don't leave us hanging! It's like waiting for the next episode of the serial on the radio in years gone by!
ReplyDeleteHi from your eastern SA second home. Enjoying having sailing blogs to read again. Been lake sailing for Easter long weekend; well walking on the salt crust of lake Gairdner in the balmy inland of an SA autumn.
ReplyDeleteWe're still planning a sail / delivery / cruise Port Stephens to Airlie about 23 May so might catch you before you head way east from ? Coffs Harbour
Bye from SeXtant