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Jetty Beach was
surprisingly busy at 8.30 am on this cloudy May Saturday. A group of
wetsuit clad swimmers were exiting the water, people were riding
bicycles, two guys were unaccountably sitting in folding deck chairs
in the middle of the parking lot reading the Saturday papers while
drinking take-out coffee, a homeless guy was wandering about looking
for change, and, overlaying all the clamour of normal human discourse
- parents shouting at kids, cars roaring in and out of the parking
lot, the thump of a sub-woofer - was the roar of heavy industrial
equipment. We were unloading our kayaks and packing them up
preparatory to paddling north to Split Solitary Island and thinking
that this was undoubtedly the "jetty lifestyle" we had seen
extolled in a realtors office window the day before.
Doug approaches Split Solitary Island
It was a relief
to leave the "jetty lifestyle" behind and paddle out of the
harbour, and around the eastern side of Muttonbird Island. Split
Solitary Island is about 7 or 8 km north of Coffs Harbour and about 3
kilometres off shore. There was a heavy bank of cloud over the
eastern horizon and a 1.5 to 2 metre easterly swell, overlaid with a
smaller southerly swell running. I'd forgotten how bumpy sea
kayaking can be in these conditions and it took me a while to get
used to the kayak rolling around in the swell. Particularly annoying
were the two round waterbottles - one in the stern hatch and one in
the bow - that clanged from one side of the kayak to the other as I
crested each wave.
The west side of Split Solitary Island
After about 1.5
hours, we reached the western side of Split Solitary Island and
paddled around the northern side to view the split that gives the
island its name. There is a big cave on the south side of the island
but it was pretty bumpy on that side with haystacks of clapotis
exploding everywhere. The dark clouds on the horizon had spread
across the sky and by the time we pointed the kayaks in toward land,
a brisk southerly had blown up.
It seemed as if
it would be a long slog back to Coffs Harbour into a headwind but as
we paddled into shore, the wind abated somewhat and even the swell
eased up. We plugged south along the coast keeping well out of reach
of rogue waves until we passed a couple of bombies north of Diggers
Head.
I was hungry,
thirsty and cramped, and, although I had water, banging from one side
of the boat to the other, it was unreachable sealed up in the stern
bulkhead. It looked as if we could land without too much trouble at
the south end of Diggers Beach. Doug was not overly keen, but agreed
to head inshore to look. Somehow, I always end up going in first at
these places, driven more by desperation to get out of the boat than
bravery or skill.
"Rudder, rudder, rudder!"
Tucked into the
very south end of the beach behind a small rock reef is a fishing
club shack and I was able to land easily enough and dragged my boat
up onto the ramp out of reach of the waves. Doug was coming in
behind me with his rudder down which spurred me to shout "rudder,
rudder, rudder" repeatedly. All he heard was "squawk,
squawk, squawk." Was a giant wave looming behind him ready to
trash him on the rocks? Or perhaps a great white shark was lining up
to take the stern off his boat? He catapulted out of the boat
screaming "what, what, what?" and was singularly
unimpressed with my rudder warnings.
Unfortunately,
we had not brought lunch with us as we thought there would be nowhere
to land so there was nothing to eat, but we could at least drink
water and I shifted the bottle out of its rolling position into a
more secure location. We launched from the beach and plugged our way
down to Little Muttonbird Island on and to the northern end of
Muttonbird Island where foolhardy fisherman were fishing off the
slippery rocks right in the wash zone. Just one big wave and they
would be washed off-shore as so often happens.
Heading north to Split Solitary Island
We thought about
paddling the extra few kilometres down to and around Korffs Islet but
all of a sudden I was tired, hungry and ready to land, so we called
it a day and paddled back into the harbour where the jetty lifestyle
was still in full swing.
Usually, we are
completely invisible to passers-by but on this day, many people came
by to ask us about our paddle day. They all seemed frightfully
impressed when we told them where we had paddled, but, it was hard to
gloat in the glow of accolades when we had paddled only about 25
kilometres in fairly benign conditions. We just are not cut out to
be "grammers."
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