I don't know how much the news down south covered the cyclone that came ashore just north of Rockhampton, but it flogged the river. About a dozen boats have sunk. About a dozen more ended up on the shore. Some of these have been floated off. Some are pushed so far into the mangroves that it will take another flood to lift them out.
The winds of 200km/hr, or whatever they were, brought down a massive number of trees around Rockhampton, destroyed several hundred houses, downed 1,800 powerlines. I am just talking Rockhampton, not the other places like Yeppoon. Those sort of winds along with the rain did not do the boats on the river much good.
Winchaser is relatively unscathed. I had taken the sails off some time back and she had been as ready as I could make her. Fuel, food and water if needed to stay on board. Through-hulls closed. The mooring she is on is very solid so I knew that would not move but was unsure if the rope would chafe through, it did not. I completely forgot about the solar panel. It's gone.
After the cyclone, as the river started to rise with flood from upstream, I motored her down and around the corner, anchored her close to the shore out of the main flow of current. Put a secondary anchor going out to the side and forward just to stop her being blown into the bank. Was happy she was safely out of the way. She was not.
Heaps of other boats had dragged. Some sunk.
At dusk that day, I got a call on mobile [lucky to get through as many towers down and little reception] that two big boats dragging down from town had taken Windchaser with them. Out on the water in my dinghy, the current was fierce, the weed thick and the logs big.
Found Windchaser about a 1/2 km down from the safe spot I left her. The other boats had dragged when the weed and logs built up enough on their mooring chains to drag. Some people could not get down and look after their boats. Others just did not care. The two boats had bumped Windchaser but snagged my second anchor. So Windchaser was dragged along from the second anchor while the primary anchor hung on and slowed them down. That would have been pulling the bow down.
That's the short form of a long story. I guess I am lucky to still have Windchaser even if she needs some hull repairs, new solar panel and new second anchor.
Louis
[I still don't have power to my house. Neighbours do, so have some power coming across via an extension cord. Have a battery running my modem and 'netbook recharging from a mess of cables inside the house. My house is fine.]