Ten Minute Downwinders

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Lobes
Lobes
885 posts
885 posts
2 Aug 2009 5:08pm
As some of you may know I was in Melbourne for the first few months of this year. I've now returned to Papua new Guinea complete with a new Downwind board. My good mate DJ sold me his Naish Glide in order to make way for a new Glide 14'.

Unfortunately since I got back home I've been absolutely buried at work and havnt had the chance to paddle much. But last week it quietened down a bit and I've managed to get out for a paddle after work more nights than not.

Its the windy season here and we are getting constant 20+ knot SE winds day and night. So I've devised a short downwinder course I can manage in the hour or so of light after work. I paddle out of the marina and hug the coast until I get to Paga Point at the top right of the pic. The geography of Paga point really compresses the wind there and we often get speeds 20-30 knots higher than the conditions. So I creep out and try and get as far as I can before turning a riding the wind and the waves back to my start point.



Theres a little reef along the way and I can often get 2 or 3 runners back to back on top of it which really good considering on my old NSP 11' I'd struggle to catch even one. All up it takes me 30 to 40 minutes depending on how much the headwinds get me on the outward leg. Of this I get a good solid Ten minute downwinder. Its a great way to unwind after work and as I improve my fitness I'm aspiring to manage 2 runs before dark (approx 6:15pm). At the moment I'm pretty shagged after one and its usually not far from sunset when I'm done. I could probably manage it if I at least kneeled a bit but my philosophy is to stand up the whole way. With the headwinds on the way out sometimes I can go a two or three minutes paddling flat out to stay stationary but whatever doesnt kill you etc

Now I'm back in PNG this is also probably a good time to give a shout out to the Vicco crew that looked after me so well when I was down there. A big thank you to the Guys at St Kilda Stand Up Paddle (aka the SUP BUS) who rented me some great gear at competitive rates. Living in Fitzroy and riding a scooter made the logistics of having a board quite difficult but they were always there when I needed a board and without them theres no way I would have done the amount of paddling I was able to. Also to SHQ who did a great job running the Cerebrus race and let me demo heaps of baords. Thanks.

A salute to the guys who i did downwinders with. Especially the crew who did the Mega-Downwinder to Mornington. That was such an amazing trip guys, it was a thrill a minute but i didnt feel worried once because I knew I had such a solid team with me



Last but not least DJ. Most times I was paddling it was with DJ and we had some crazy adventures. I learned so much from him and I recommend anyone who gets the chance to go for a paddle with the guy. He's first class gentleman and unsurpassed for SUP knowledge.

Thanks Victoria. I'll be back
Homeally
Homeally
VIC
409 posts
VIC, 409 posts
2 Aug 2009 7:33pm
LOBES!!!

That paddle looks insane!! yeah I would be stuffed too... even just paddling out to paga point!!

Im really jealous of you man! AH I MISS POM!!... Maybe you could start a paddle club at the RPYC... Im sure there will be people there that would be really keen!!

How is the ship dodging going? I bet you must get some strange looks when you paddle in and out of the breakwater at the yatch club... Do you ever paddle off Ela beach? Twould be a nice paddle to local island from there!! haha

Do you surf the reef's around POM at all? I have fond memories of travelling out to Bomana barraks and jumping on a bananna boat with andy abel from PNGSA and surfing the reefs.... some great surfs were had indeed....

Keep the peace mate!!
Lobes
Lobes
885 posts
885 posts
2 Aug 2009 5:54pm
Homeally said...

LOBES!!!

That paddle looks insane!! yeah I would be stuffed too... even just paddling out to paga point!!

Im really jealous of you man! AH I MISS POM!!... Maybe you could start a paddle club at the RPYC... Im sure there will be people there that would be really keen!!

How is the ship dodging going? I bet you must get some strange looks when you paddle in and out of the breakwater at the yatch club... Do you ever paddle off Ela beach? Twould be a nice paddle to local island from there!! haha

Do you surf the reef's around POM at all? I have fond memories of travelling out to Bomana barraks and jumping on a bananna boat with andy abel from PNGSA and surfing the reefs.... some great surfs were had indeed....

Keep the peace mate!!


Hey Homeally, when where you here bro?

Yeah I still surf with Andy and the boys at Sero beach down past the barracks. They gave me a funny look when I first turned up with my SUP but they all had a go and seemed to enjoy it. They are most impressed that I dont need the banana boat to deliver me out to the breaks like they all do

In the past I paddled my NSP out to Lolorua Island, Gemo passage and Ela Beach too. With the Glide Im hoping to get to Local Island and Fishermans Island too. Just need the right wind but it WILL happen! Also plannning a downwinder from Sero beach back to Ela beach but as Im the only SUP'r here at the moment Im a bit wary. Will probably happen in the next few weeks though. Will organise a chase boat for the first time I think. The tides are not quite right now anyway.

I've started giving a few lessons at the Yacht club and interest has been phenomenal. I have to paddle past the bar on my way out and the old soaks up there are just hanging out for me to fall in LoL but I havnt yet I always take heaps of care hugging the wharf like I do. I had to hang back and let a big freighter go in front of me yesterday but you usually get heaps of warning
Homeally
Homeally
VIC
409 posts
VIC, 409 posts
2 Aug 2009 8:08pm
I was there from 2002-2005... my parents worked in the aussie high com so i came up for every holidays! Woke up with the harbour out my window every morning from Kone Dobu... very beautiful!!

haha... the old boaties up the yachty... hahaha... id prolly know a few of them that are still there.. hahaha... good old andy kennoch who used to work for ela motors is an absolute legend!! haha.... drunk my first beer up there too!!... SP.... ah i miss it... haha!!

HAHAHAHA!!! I could so see andy getting real stoked on the board!!! he just loves anything new and loves png surfing!! he was here not long ago receiving a donation of boards for PNGSA from people in aus... maybe soon there could be some sups in there as well!!

yeah watch for those big a$$ freighters man... they dont care for anyone... even the tug boats... one almost ran into us when we were having a sail on the harbour.. haha
surfydad
surfydad
QLD
166 posts
QLD, 166 posts
2 Aug 2009 8:37pm
Hi Lobes,

I was just checking out where you SUPed on Google Earth and I came across this. What is going on there?
There are no other towns close by.


Th0m0
Th0m0
QLD
529 posts
QLD, 529 posts
2 Aug 2009 9:43pm
Yea, bringing back memories for me too. Very rusty ones though. I lived there from 1973 -1978. Went to a catholic primary school in Boroko. Think it was called St Josephs. Used to sail sabots and arafura cadets out of the yacht club. I was trying to remember where we lived but must have killed too many brain cells since then. My Dad was teaching welding at the Port Moresby Tech College. Don't even know if it's still there. I didn't surf back then as I was still in primary school but I remember there were some guys surfing the reefs even then.

Th0m0
DavidJohn
DavidJohn
VIC
17570 posts
VIC, 17570 posts
2 Aug 2009 10:35pm
Thanks for your kind words Lobes.. and take care of that board.. .. We're jealous that you're paddling in boardies.. and that down-winder course looks great.

Now go get some more pics of that great place where you are for us.. and try and make it back here for the Mambo.

DJ
Lobes
Lobes
885 posts
885 posts
3 Aug 2009 8:20am
surfydad said...

Hi Lobes,

I was just checking out where you SUPed on Google Earth and I came across this. What is going on there?
There are no other towns close by.



Hi Surfydad, that looks like Porebada village. A Motu fishing village quite near Port Moresby. I say fishing village but a lot of people actually commute to work in the city. Its maybe an hour away by road, probably less. The houses on the water is a common construction here. People put stilts into the seabed and erect houses, and often whole suburbs over the water.



(Homeally you might be in that pic somewhere too )
boarder paul
boarder paul
1952 posts
1952 posts
3 Aug 2009 8:29am
I love staying at places like this on the water.

Stayed in rarotonga not long ago but since there huricane the corral has come in to far and makes life interesting.

Homeally
Homeally
VIC
409 posts
VIC, 409 posts
3 Aug 2009 11:14am
Lobes said...

surfydad said...

Hi Lobes,

I was just checking out where you SUPed on Google Earth and I came across this. What is going on there?
There are no other towns close by.



Hi Surfydad, that looks like Porebada village. A Motu fishing village quite near Port Moresby. I say fishing village but a lot of people actually commute to work in the city. Its maybe an hour away by road, probably less. The houses on the water is a common construction here. People put stilts into the seabed and erect houses, and often whole suburbs over the water.



(Homeally you might be in that pic somewhere too )


I SEE MY OLD HOUSE!!!! I used to live in the one on the far right!! hahaha... AH MEMORIES!!! Used to walk from there to Anderson's for a thai beef pie then to the yachty for a beer in the arvo before footy training.... I miss POM!!
Homeally
Homeally
VIC
409 posts
VIC, 409 posts
3 Aug 2009 11:17am
Sorry.. it was the far left in Lego land... (for those who dont know... thats Kone's nickname... see all the block houses...)
StKilda SUPB
StKilda SUPB
VIC
195 posts
VIC, 195 posts
3 Aug 2009 1:24pm
Hey Lobes, so sorry to see you go mate - but keep in touch and keep sending us some pics of PNG!

Let us know when you're coming back - we'll have the beers cold for you!!

Thanks again for supporting the SUP Bus St Kilda!!

Mike and Phil
worrier
worrier
WA
726 posts
WA, 726 posts
3 Aug 2009 1:51pm
Hey Lobes..
Im off to Lihir next week for a months work.
Any waves over that way you know off?
W
Lobes
Lobes
885 posts
885 posts
3 Aug 2009 2:22pm
worrier said...

Hey Lobes..
Im off to Lihir next week for a months work.
Any waves over that way you know off?
W


I have not been to Lihir but based on its location (just north of New Ireland) it gets exposed to some serious pacific swells. But to be honest at this time of year theres unlikely to be many waves . The surf season kicks in about November.

Heres a link to some weather buoys in the region that will give you swell height and duration http://www.lajollasurf.org/gblpac.html You want SW pacific Orthographic Projection
Piros
Piros
QLD
7303 posts
QLD, 7303 posts
3 Aug 2009 4:33pm
Lobes do any of the ships ever come to grief on that reef in the harbour , looks pretty nasty. Nice place to Sup though.

Rob
Lobes
Lobes
885 posts
885 posts
3 Aug 2009 2:52pm
Nah its well marked night and day with beacons. That reef is called "The Bottle Dump". It was the main rubbish tip for Port Moresby for many years in the 19th and 20th centuries. All of the metal and organic stuff has disintegrated just leaving heaps of old medicine and drink bottles. When I was a kid we used to snorkle there and come up with strange looking antique glass bottles. In fact I was SUPping over it on a glassy day last year and I could even still see some bottles lying on the bottom.

There are wrecks in the harbour but they are mostly those of fishing trawlers that have been scuttled. But there are a few 1940's era shipwrecks that the Japs bombed the eff out of during that little dispute. Notably the MV MacDhui: (just out of picture)

http://www.pacificwrecks.com/ships/hmas/macdhui.html

Sunk by Japanese Air Raid
On June 17, 1942 MacDhui was docked at Port Moresby and unloaded her cargo of 44 gallon drums of aviation fuel. When a Japanese air raid, the ship tried to avoid bombs by maneuvering in Fairfax Harbor, but had to dock again that night after sustaining bomb damage. During this initial attack, ten crew members were killed and wounded.

The next day, June 18, 1942 Japanese bombers returned. Twenty-seven Mitsubishi G4M1 Betty bombers of the 4th Kokutai led by Navy Lt Renpei Egawa, took off from Vunakanau near Rabaul. Egawa would later lead the first Japanese air-raid on Guadalcanal on August 7, 1942.

Captain Campbell tried to avoid the bombs by maneuvering in Fairfax Harbor. MacDhui was hit directly amidships, and lost rudder control. She hit the reef central in the harbor, and rolled on her side sinking in the harbor near Hanubada village. The crew took to lifeboats and although shaken, safely made it to shore.


The wreck of the MacDhui is supposedly haunted which Im not sure about but i know for sure it contains a huge sea snake nest. I have not SUPped around it but I want to soon as its on its last legs and will soon be just a pile of rust flakes on the sea bed.
Piros
Piros
QLD
7303 posts
QLD, 7303 posts
3 Aug 2009 5:16pm
The wreck of the MacDhui is supposedly haunted which Im not sure about but i know for sure it contains a huge sea snake nest. I have not SUPped around it but I want to soon as its on its last legs and will soon be just a pile of rust flakes on the sea bed.

Sounds like a good place NOT to fall. You need one of those new Naish boards with the see through panel.
Lobes
Lobes
885 posts
885 posts
3 Aug 2009 3:30pm
More on the haunting, this is a good story:

Former vice-commodore of the Royal Papua Yacht Club, Trevor Kerr, tells of a supernatural experience in 1979 when the ashes of the late Captain J. Campbell, skipper of the Macdhui, were laid to rest with his ship. The powered launch Tina, owned and skippered by yacht club committee member Russ Behan, approached the wreck with Captain Campbell’s two sons, a United Church minister, and Kerr on board.

“The weather in the harbour was unusually placid, not a zephyr stirred,” writes former Port Moresby diver Neil Whiting in Wreck and Reefs of Port Moresby.

“The sea was so clear that the superstructure of the Macdhui could be seen below the surface of the water.

“There was not a ripple on the surface or current drift to break the calm.

“With heads bowed in prayer, the United Church minister upturned the urn containing Captain Campbell’s ashes and scattered the contents into the sea.

“Trevor, observing the ceremony in a more detached fashion than the others, observed the most amazing sequence of events.

“The ashes initially clouded the water as one would expect, but almost immediately condensed into a form similar to a teardrop.

“Then, the most amazing phenomenon occurred.

“The teardrop cloud quite rapidly crossed the six-metre intervening gap between the Tina and the Macdhui and disappeared into the hull.

“At a nudge from Trevor, Russ glanced up and also observed the incredible event.

“The engines of the launch were quickly started and in a state of chilled awe, the funeral party motored away.

“Captain Campbell had returned to his ship.”


I know Trevor extremely well and hes not prone to BS. Make of it what you will. I'll try and get over there with a camera one of these days.
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