Day One.
Up around 05.30, last visits to the marina bathrooms, big mug of strong Lavazza plunger coffee to get the motor going and cook breakfast. Zab jagged it when he bought the meat. It was the butcher just near Woolworths that probably has the best to offer in meat from Rockhampton, the beef capital of Australia. Four succulent rib fillet steaks, 6 spicy rissoles, 6 tasty BBQ sausages and 6 scrumptious rashers of smokey bacon and a roast chicken made up our meat supply.
I asked zab to get a 4 slice vertical toaster that gave us crunchy toast to go with our bacon and eggs and smokey BBQ sauce. It was a memorable breakfast that was a great start to the day.
Lines slipped, zab took her out and we were onto our start mark around 08.00. It immediately became apparent that hand steering was going to be very arduous because when the tiller was let go she would sharply veer off course. It was time to pull out the tiller ram for the auto pilot and see if it would do the job neither of us wanted to do. Thankfully and mercifully it did.
Next was to get the engine up to cruising speed and temp before we got too far from Rosslyn Bay in case it did not want to play the game. Again thankfully it performed well too. Between 2200 to 2400 rpm there is a sweet spot the engine liked and I was surprised and delighted to observe that it pushed the yacht along at a comfortable 7 knots plus. The only breeze was the 7 knots we were making and the swell was less than .5m so with engine and pilot doing their job we were able to get about our jobs.
First was to figure out what each of the 12 lines coming back from the mast was for. Yes that is 12, 6 a side.

The only ones we were concerned with being genoa on the furler haliyard, main haliyard, topping lift and reefing lines if we got to raise the main that stayed in its boom bag the whole trip.
Humocky Island and Ship Rock were the first hard bits to get past before our next waypoint and from there on, apart from a chicken and salad sandwich for lunch the day was uneventful.

I knew the S&S 36s are a strongly built yacht but Hullabaloo seems to be particularly so. It was confirmed by a gentleman zab met at Bundaberg Port Marina who had sailed on the yacht in one of her S to H races. He said she was the strongest yacht he had sailed on, the fastest he had sailed under spinnaker on and that she is original except for the solar panel gantry on the stern. Zab was chuffed on hearing that.
Zab and I made up a complimentary team. He is a fit 30 yo ex surfer arborist, knows his knots and has been on boat bourne surfing safaris in Indonesia but no sailing experience. I am a broken down arthiritic diabetic 72 yo with MED I, Master IV and AYF Offshore Yacht Masters. A combination of brawn and brain one might say.
Alzheimers nor Parkinsons have not hit me but two old guys were talking and one asked the other which would he prefer if he had to have one. Parkinsons definitely he said. I would rather spill the drink than forget where the bottle is.

If we had got away a couple of hours earlier we might have pushed on to Burnett Heads but it was near sundown as we approached Bustard Head so we elected to pull into Pancake Creek.
Approaching Pancake in the dark from the north you pick up the Bustard Head light easily but only closer in do you pick up the Clews Point light. There is a green on the end of the sand bar and lead lights on the port side however the front lead carries a red too. Going in the middle is fairly safe but I definitely would not go in with a strong northerly.
There were bonfires on the beach (4wd people) and tinnies still with their nav lights on and 7 yachts anchored just inside where we picked a spot to drop the pick. It wasn't till morning we saw at least a dozen more yachts anchored at the bottom end of the creek. You could spend a week or more in there and have a ball.
Rib fillet, chat potatoes drowning in butter, smokey BBQ sauce, numerous Peronis, nips of rum, bit of music and pleasant conversation filled our evening before a sound sleep.
I did plot our course on our paper charts but lacking a hand bearing compass did not allow us to plot our positions the way we are supposed to. I believe it is still a legal requirement to carry paper charts and plot your positions on them. If an insurance claim goes to court paper charts may save your bacon.