Banana Boat
Loading up the barge |
We rocked up on time at 8:30am in the morning and found
skipper Shane and his trainee deckhand Kieran working pretty hard at loading
the barge at the Denham jetty. As part of our volunteering education we were
extremely happy to go to Dirk Hartog Island on a barge run. I noticed immediately
the precision and skill these guys had uploading big barrels of diesel and
stood like a spare appendage at a wedding reception taking photos of it all.
Ranger Chris pulled up with a trailer and started unloading some pallets on to
the deck. When we took off it was a magic wind-free morning.
Some cloud cover soon disappeared and the sun soon broke through to reveal a beautiful
calm Shark Bay. The conversation was funny and full of banter as we cruised out
of the harbour. Suddenly, the starboard
engine started acting up. We could hear it straining and dropping out at times.
When Kieran opened the engine hatch an alarming amount of grey smoke billowed up
from below deck. A large effort was made
immediately by the crew and Chris to fix the problem. Again there was not much
we could do.
Chris walked over to us and asked us in a concerned voice if
we had brought bananas on board. He explained that throughout history sailors
had been blaming bananas for bad luck on their ships. They found that bananas
had all ripened at the same time and were useless to stow on a long voyage. I
don’t know Chris well enough to gauge what his serious straight face looks like in comparison with his taking the
'Mick' straight face but the banana story sounded pretty bent in my ears.
Guiltily we ate our bananas we had brought for lunch early in an attempt to
prevent anything worse from occurring.
Meanwhile the boat had turned around to head back to Denham.
After some repairs and assistance by phone from the mainland and the on-board crew the engine started
settling down. We then turned
around and headed back to Dirk Hartog. We were relieved to say the least.
Julie and I spotted several dolphins. I managed to recognize the square head of the
Loggerhead turtle who eyeballed me from 10 meters away before, with amazing agility,
disappeared straight down in the dark depths of the Bay, We were told that
there were many whales in the bay at this moment in time and that we were
likely to get close to some of them on the way back.
Yep!! That's what it looked like |
The barge cruising just off-shore of dirk Hartog Island |
The skipper moved the barge closer to Mystery Beach but had to wait for the tide to rise by another six inches. Just after dark the crew managed to load the ship with empty diesel barrels and a trailer full of old irrigation pipes that were removed by volunteers on a previous voyage.
Loading the barge in the moonlight |
The trip home was a bouncy affair. For four hours the barge danced onto the waves. We were all brave and chatted standing up for hours. When I mentioned to Jules I was feeling a little see-sick tickle in the back of the throat it was Julie that disappeared down the back of the boat for some dry heaving. She said the fumes and cold helped against that nauseating feeling that had taken hold of her. Darn bananas were about to haunt us again.
In the end we had the time of our lives and have put our names down to go again to beautiful Dirk Hartog Island.
Semi-grey nomad tips.
- Don’t bring bananas onto a boat (EVER)!!!!!
2 comments:
Loved your story again Mars,I wonder if the sign that Dirt Hartog left on the island to say he had been there is in the Maritime Museum in Freo.
Hi Sandra. Thanks for your support. The sign was removed 81 years later by Willem de Vlaming in 1697 and taken to Holland. It is now on view at the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. Merry Christmas
Post a Comment