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Technically speaking the Whitsunday Islands are the five or six islands around Whitsunday Island. The larger group shown on the map is really the Cumberland group.
Enough of that. We left Mackay and this started our cruise through a wonderful group of islands that really are all that they are cracked up to be.


This photo really belongs back a few pages as it shows the GPS readout as we crossed the Tropic of Capricorn. Two points to notice is the speed and the accuracy. The boat gets along at 8 knots whenever there is a reasonable breeze behind us. The accuracy of the reading is thanks to the US turning off a jamming thing called Selective Availability, which allows the accuracy now to be as good as 5 metres .
We left Mackay after resupplying and enjoying the company of Lorraine, Russell, Travis and Reid (friends that go back to pre-natal classes for when Courtney was born). A short sail to Keswick-St Bees Island, one of the few islands that have large slices of freehold land that are being subdivided so that you can buy your own slice of Whitsunday.
After anchoring for a few days off Keswick we continued along in classic sailing conditions, 15 knots of south easterly and sunshine and came into Brampton-Carlisle Islands. We found the north-western side of Carlisle met our criteria, sheltered from the breeze, not too much swell rolling in and a little beach to take the girls. We left Mackay stocked up with new fishing gear and Col determined to catch a fish of substance.



From Lindeman we went on to Whitehaven beach off Whitsunday Island. This a lovely place but suddenly we found people - by the hundreds. There was easily 50 yachts anchored off the beach and a couple of hundred people come over for day trips each day. We moved to Haslewood Island after two days which offered good snorkelling and a somewhat less hectic white silica sand beach.






From there it was out to Hook Island. We first anchored at Stonehaven harbour for a couple of days and then on to Blue Pearl Bay off Hayman Island. This was a particularly great with the best snorkelling yet. During the middle of the day the place filled with day-trippers and the odd guest from Hayman Island (conspicuous by the blue esky, designer swimmers and Moet).

Interspaced by snorkelling, swimming and fishing life aboard still goes on as usual. The cat, Tiger, lays around and schoolwork goes on.



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