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Kankama said..
I don't want to hijack the thread, but after visiting Tassie back in 2018 on our cat, I won't be going back. Continually changing winds, worrying about anchorages as fronts go through and a lack of ability to leave the boat and go and visit the wonderful mountains I could see from the boat makes Tassie a no go zone for my boat. Take a car or campervan with a kayak on top and see everywhere you can by boat apart from Port Davey and see all of the interior as well. I love Tassie but cruising there was not good for me. Going to Tassie on a boat is the reverse of sailing Queensland. In Queensland you need a boat because you have all the inaccessible reef and islands off a not amazing coastline. In Tassie you have wonderful national parks and almost all the coastline and islands available to land based travel and very few spots you can safely leave the boat for to check them out. It did my head in to watch people in cars getting better access to beaches and bays than we could in the boat. We did get two fabulous days - one sailing from St Helens south when we saw hundreds of albatross and hundreds of dolphins and another day where we hung around the seal colony at the base of Bruny. But those days were rare good ones, far too much hanging around due to weather.
Did you have any of the sailing or boating guides for Tasmania?
( l have two of them )
They are great reading and have mucho excellent information for cruising boaties, specially interstate boat owners.
They detail nearly every popular mooring area around the coast....the conditions you are likely to find...re depth, the type of ' ground '...which side of the bay is best in any given wind...how many boats can fit etc etc... what facilities are available in the coastal towns and who to contact if you require a berth or other services.
Or if you just need a spot to get out out of the breeze for awhile.
Going cruising without a Tas cruising guide is a bit like trying to cross the Simpson Desert without a map etc etc.
MAST also has a shipload of cruising information on their website.
As does BOM a must if anyone is gonna go cruising anywhere.
Reading your post it seems that me that a large part of your post is about not having access to a road vehicle to explore inland areas....which is a problem common to the mainland as well...unless you are boating on the Gold Coast or Whitsundays...where there are car hire joints on nearly every other corner.
The great bit about boating in Tasmania is the pristine, isolated AND near empty anchorages/ mooring areas...except in busy times...where you can unwind in peace....after checking the weather forecast...first, of course.