Cruising World - November - December 2016

(Wang) #1
cruisingworld.com

56


november/december 2016

the tropics, since we had mostly found
northwesterlies on our way up the coast.
But — you can see where this is going —
the trades reasserted themselves once
we turned around and pointed the bow
south. Day after day, we got up at 0400
and sailed all through the sunlit hours at
a 30-degree angle of heel, tacking back
and forth into the wind, dodging spray in
the cockpit, and sopping up water on the
cabin sole, and at the end of each day, we
found we had made 30 miles.
Sailing to windward is uncomfortable
enough for the nonpregnant, but Alisa
was approaching that part of her preg-
nancy where everything is uncomfortable.
And Elias was 3 by this time, and didn’t
necessarily understand why he had to sit
next to us in the sloping cockpit for hour
after hour, reading the same books and
singing the same songs, and why he never
got to go ashore.
Eventually we did make it out of the
southeast trades back to Iluka. And all too
soon we were gathering with our friends

there for a farewell barbecue at the
beach. It was fun to think of settling
down in Iluka long enough to have the
baby, and we considered it. But the horizon
still called; we weren’t ready to give up our
wandering ways just yet. The draw of one
more new place was too strong to resist,
and Tasmania was in the oi ng.
Sydney was conveniently on our path
down to Tasmania. Two weeks of sail-
ing along an unfamiliar coast took us to
Pittwater, the massive natural harbor
just north of Sydney, where we caught up
with our friends Peter Addenbrooke and
Vanessa Georgeson on Akimbo, a well-
kept double- ender that had carried them
on years of adventures between Sydney
and New Caledonia. They were some of
our fi rst Australian sailing friends. We had
spent our fi rst-ever Australian Christmas
with them, and Peter had taken me for my
fi rst Australian surf. They now of ered us
the hospitality of a raft-up on their moor-
ing in Pittwater, and the visit was perfectly
timed for a second Australian Christmas in

their company. We felt the beginnings of a
tradition in this new country.
After a short sail down the coast, we
had the pleasure of sailing into Sydney
Harbour past the Opera House and under
the Harbour Bridge. After San Francisco,
this was the second great city of the
world that we had sailed to on board
Pelagic. Alex and Diana gave us more great
hospitality, settling us into the visitors
berth at the dock where they kept Kukka,
handing us the keys to a car and their
house, making us feel completely at home,
and sharing the delights of the world-
famous New Year’s fi reworks in Sydney
Harbour. Then, after another too-short
visit, it was time for us to head farther
south if we wanted to meet our goal of
crossing Bass Strait before Alisa’s third
trimester began.
Tasmania would be new to us, but it
would be a novelty within a larger pattern
that was familiar. After more than a year in
Australia, we felt comfortable in the place.
Part of being at home in Oz was the result
of our physical knowledge of the continent
— all the exploring that had seen Pelagic
up and down the 1,100 miles of coastline

between Townsville and Sydney. But our
real feeling for the place, the things we
treasured and the bits that still confused
us, had come from a hundred interactions
with Australian friends: the barbecues and
surf sessions, the anchorages shared with
sailors, and the great pleasure of taking
nonsailing companions for a sail. Pelagic
had turned into our magic carpet for dis-
covering this new country, the vessel
that had shown us the out-of-the-way
anchorages and that had put us in the path
of these new friends who fi lled us in on
what it meant to be Australian.
Cruising, like any travel, really is all
about the people.

At er a stay in South Ar ica, Mike Litzow
and his family are currently crossing the
South Atlantic and headed, very slowly,
toward home in Alaska. You can follow along
with the family’s travels on their blog (thelife
galactic.blogspot.com).

Three-year-old Elias helps infl ate the dinghy (above) while cruising
through tropical Queensland. Australian cruisers Diana Bagnall and Alex
Nemeth (right) of ered hospitality and friendship during the Litzows’
time in Sydney.

MIKE LITZOW

november/december 2016

cruisingworld.com

56

Free download pdf