Sulawesi
It took us 2 nights and 3
days from Sabah to reach the northern
shore of Sulawesi. Arrived at midnight,
found an anchorage with the help of a waning new moon, radar and forward
looking depth sounder. The charts have
very little details of the coastline, any depth under 200m is not marked!
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Our route |

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Cloves drying along the footpath |
Anchorages along this northern coastline are difficult to
find. Deep waters ( 50 +m ) at the entrance of most bays. We
hope to find some depths under 25m
inside the bay as we can only anchor at those depths. Many times we have
to leave and try to find another
suitable bay before night falls.
Occasionally we have to tie a stern line to a tree on the beach if we
are anchoring on a steep bank.
The locals are very friendly
and helpful. Often we buy fruits and
vegetables from the locals. We just ask
and take what is offered. We can end up
with 2 bunches of green bananas (giving us 14 combs) and 16 coconuts!
The fishermen will motor
close to our boat to have a good look at us. We felt like monkeys in the
zoo. The more daring ones will climb on
board to have a long chat with us. As
it was the month of fasting, we didn’t have to offer them any
refreshments. The shopkeepers are
another breed. We have been short -changed and over charged
many times over goods we bought. For
example a basic labourer’s wage is 40,000 rupiahs /day ( NZ $ 6.00 ). I have been charged 50,000 rupiahs for a
tray of 30 eggs that were well past their used by date. Normal price for an egg is 1000 rupiah.
We took a month cruising the
northern arm of Sulawesi. At this time of year, the winds are predominantly
from the south, making anywhere on the
North coast a sheltered spot, we found many lovely offshore islands, where the
reefs were still healthy although everywhere it is now over fished. Gone are
the days when you jump overboard and you are surrounded by schools of table
size fish and the odd large predator.
Sulawesi has such a long and interesting coastline that we ran out of time to visit the other 2
arms. Took another month of solid
sailing to return to Malaysia. From
Miri, Sarawak to the top end of Borneo, down to the western end of the northern
arm, across the northern arm down the length of Sulawesi to Makassar ( capital
of Sulawesi ) to clear out of Indonesia, across the bottom end of Borneo,
across the Java sea, South China Sea to Johore, Malaysia, a journey of 2500+
nautical miles. It was very ambitious
of us to attempt this given the amount of time we had. We needed 6 months to fully explore
Sulawesi.
Coming down the eastern end of the northern arm was very taxing
on both the body and soul. We had 400
miles of journey when the wind was from the bow, the most arduous angle of
sailing. Encountered a particularly bad
patch, sailing south from the eastern end of the northern arm. We took 5 nights, sailing 14 hours each
night to cover some 66 miles, barely making
10 miles per night. At times we
seem to be sliding backwards. Along
this part of the coast, the current was 2-3 knots against us and with strong
winds and rough seas we could hardly make any headway. The winds were extremely strong during the
day as the day breeze accentuated the SE trades. From 9 am to 4 pm the winds were gusting over 20 knots. We found that if we only started sailing
after 4 pm, the winds were only 15 –17 knots.
We would leave the anchorage at
about 5 pm and initially the seas were still rough from the blow during the
day, but the waves eventually calmed
down by midnight. In the morning we had to find an anchorage ( before 9 am ). Anchoring during the day gave us a chance to sleep before the
night ordeal. We were most glad to get
away from this part of the coastline into the open seas for then the effect of
the current was negligible . Once we sailed
down the eastern side of Sulawesi, it was easy sailing with the wind behind us. Cleared out if Indonesia in Makassar. From Makassar to Malaysia a journey of 1100
miles, was easily covered in less that 10 days. It was lovely to dock at Puteri Harbour , Johor and have a super
long shower.
A passenger for a night passage.
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Our journey |
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