SV Panta Rhei Retirement Trip

Vessel Name: Panta Rhei
Vessel Make/Model: Able Apogee 50
Hailing Port: Seattle
Crew: Larry and Karen
Social:
18 September 2017 | Seattle
23 August 2017 | Prince Rupert
15 August 2017 | Anan Bear Observatory
19 July 2017 | Petersburg, AK
17 June 2017 | Hoonah, AK
03 June 2017 | Seward AK
03 June 2017 | Denali
25 April 2017 | Seward AK
23 March 2017 | Seward, AK
11 March 2017 | Seward, AK
23 January 2017 | Seward AK
06 December 2016 | Seward AK
12 November 2016 | Seward Alaska
14 October 2016 | Valdez, AK
21 September 2016
05 August 2016 | Seward, AK
26 July 2016 | Whittier, AK
19 July 2016 | Valdez, Alaska
05 July 2016 | Seward, Alaska
Recent Blog Posts
18 September 2017 | Seattle

We are back in Seattle

It feels like home. Of course we are not in Silshole. Maybe we will be, someday, but there is a list and we are on it. In the meantime we are at Bainbridge Island Marina.

23 August 2017 | Prince Rupert

The dinghy holds air again

It wasn't very nice of the bear to tear the fabric across a seam. We were worried that we couldn't patch it but tried anyway. The glue had a job to do and it did it!

15 August 2017 | Anan Bear Observatory

A Grizzly Bear damaged our dinghy

We were visiting the Anan Bear Observatory south of Wrangell. It is one of the best places to visit in all of SE Alaska BECAUSE it has bears. But (as we learned) there is a dark side to this bear concentration. And of course, there is a story to tell.

19 July 2017 | Petersburg, AK

Moving On

"No matter where you go, there you are" (unknown reference). By now we have been there and done that. Most recently that included Cannery Cove on Admiralty Island. The photo shows the quiet grandeur of the setting with Ron and Suzie's boat SV Tango in the foreground. It has been like that for the last [...]

17 June 2017 | Hoonah, AK

We are in Hoonah, SE Alaska now

We got something resembling a high pressure ridge so we moved expeditously across the Gulf of Alaska. The crossing took three days and weather stayed as forecast. That was a very good thing. The weather changes in the far north far more rapidly and dramatically than we ever experienced in the more southern [...]

03 June 2017 | Seward AK

Crossing the Gulf of Alaska

We are still in Seward, AK. Now that spring has come, why not start south?

Diving in Poor Knights Islands

29 March 2014 | Tutukaka NZ
Larry Nelson
We are still hard at work renovating the interior of Panta Rhei and there is much to show and tell about the changes that are occurring, but all work and no play is not a proper game plan. We decided to take Saturday and go diving. Jacque Cousteau rated the Poor Knights Islands the 7th best dive site in the world (according to the dive operators!) and we can drive there in half an hour from where we are staying. Then we can take a boat 24 nautical miles out to sea to the islands. Why not take a dive trip with the local operator? The weather was perfect (warm, sunny, calm). So we did. It turns out that a lot of other divers had the same idea. The operator has 3 boats,...all full. But we got spots.

The "draw" is the clear water, reported to be 35 meters. It is a wet suit dive, but not really cold. The water was 21C. The Poor Knights Islands have been a Reserve since 1998, and the rebound of the local fish population has been amazing. Inside the caves, there were so many fish that at times they blotted out the sun! We saw giant lobster, scorpion fish (poisonous spines), nudibrachs (tiny but unique and georgeous), large snapper, sting rays (very large), sponges, Lord Howe coral fish, Damoiselles, and common dolphins. We did two dives and enjoyed lunch with hot drinks in between. The dive experience was managed very well by the operator. We were safe and free to simply enjoy the swimming. NZ diving is different than tropical diving, but no less fun.

Comments

About & Links