Cook’s Look Hike and More Snorkeling

Pete and Fern picked us up at 07:30 to go on the Cook’s Look hike up the mountain to the left of us. In 1770, Captain Cook mapped the Queensland coastline. He was trying to make his way to the open ocean and couldn’t find a pass through the reefs. He sailed to Lizard Island, anchoring in Watson’s Bay, and scaled the mountain. At the top of the Continue reading

Diving Cod Hole & No Name Reef

Everyone was coming at 07:30, so we were up very early to get ready. Kosmos was a mess inside, since we have been more focused on the exterior than the interior since getting out of the yard. We ate a quick breakfast, did some tidying, and got our own tanks filled and our diving gear ready.

Everyone was on board and ready to go by 0800. There were 11 of us total — 4 snorkelers, the instructor and his two students, and another couple that would be diving with us.

Cod hole is 10 miles southeast of Lizard Island. We were happy to see there was a mooring available. The reason the spot is called Cod Hole is because gigantic Continue reading

Snorkeling in Watson’s Bay

We headed over to the beach a little before 13:00 (1:00 pm). Everyone was gathered around a small picnic table under a tree on the beach. There were about 16 people there, all Australian retirees. We listened to the horse race on the radio, then hung out and chatted with everyone for a couple more hours. Everyone was really nice. Politics was at the forefront of everyone’s mind since Continue reading

Diving the Barrier Reef and Eating Bugs

Continued from yesterday”¦..

After the second dive lunch was served. It was a nice lunch with salad fixings and sandwich fixings, pasta salad and potato salad. We scarfed our food while the boat traveled to the next site, called Gone Again.

Forty minutes after finishing the last dive, we were back in for the third dive. Talk about pushing the limits on the surface interval between dives! This was another Continue reading

Diving the Great Barrier Reef

The Great Barrier Reef is made up of about 2900 separate reefs. Some are barrier reefs, which run along the Australian continental shelf and separate the ocean from the mainland, and the rest are fringing reefs, located within the lagoon created by the barrier reefs. It is one of the seven wonders of the natural world. It stretches for 2000 kilometers from the tropic of Capricorn to just south of Papua New Guinea and is the most extensive reef system in the world. Within the Barrier Reef are 1500 species of fish, 400 types of coral, 4,000 breeds of mollusks, 800 Echinoderms species (including sea cucumbers), 500 varieties of seaweed, 200 bird species, 1500 sponge species, 30 plus marine mammal species and 118 species of butterflies. The diving within the reef is supposed to be extraordinary with so many colorful things to see in the water.

Being as avid of a diver as Jaime is, he wasted no time in organizing a dive trip for us. We had been told that Continue reading