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  • suckling pig

    I like Cairns a lot. It is a shame we have only one day here,and my Great Barrier Reef snorkel tour uses up all of it.

    But I may not ever come back here, and this is one of the things on my “bucket list” so no way will miss it.

    We meet in the Queen’s lounger at 8:50 AM. I arrive on time, as is my habit, but there is a long line of people waiting to get in and it is almost 9 when I get in a can hear the announcement, which is “Get in line for the tour boat”. Table 29 is there except for David. He and I had planned to go together, but he has already gone ahead and we end up on separate boats. I thought all the boats would be going to the same place, but in fact that is not the case. Although the boat says “Green Island Transfer” on it, we don’t go to Green Island at all, but to a pontoon or floating platform anchored over a part of the reef. The other boat is within sight, but at a different pontoon, so David and I have similar days, but not together.

    The boat we go out on is about 50′ power catamaran, and it travels at about 25 knots, and the engines don’t seem to be working hard at that so I suppose it can do much more. The brochure warns of possible rough seas but today is smooth, and we have an easy 90 minute cruise to the reef. The cabin is air-conditioned, actually on the cold side.

    When we get to the pontoon, it is a good size, about 100 x 40 feet, with a generator room, galley, and showers. There are no toilets, but there are 4 on the boat, with holding tanks. They provide snorkel gear of excellent quality. They offer a beginner’s scuba lesson for $136, but I didn’t bring that much money, so I just snorkel. Just snorkel! This is the finest snorkel experience of my life.

    butterfly fishparrot fish
    I take my time getting ready, but I’m still in the water long before anyone else and for at least 10 minutes I have the roped off snorkel area to myself. Close to the pontoon all I see is branch coral, quite deep below me, and no fish. Disappointing but I keep swimming. The water shoals and a school of tiny bright blue fish swim by. Then the reef comes up to meet me and there are all kinds of coral, anemones, sea cucumbers and fish.

    I particularly like the butterfly fish, who mate for life, and the pair move in unison, 2 inches apart, and neither ever gets much in front or behind. Apparently they can be together 30 years, just like Shirley and I. I only see one pair, and follow them for a while. I didn’t get a good picture. Although the Olympus 850 camera works well underwater, the LCD screen is very hard to see, so my aim is very approximate.

    On the way out they warned us not to touch the coral, step on it or damage it. So naturally I’m annoyed when I catch this parrot fish in the act of biting off a piece. Who gave him permission?

    There are lots more fish and one green turtle. I took over 100 pictures. I’ll be putting together a slide show later.

    This is the sign on the upper deck of the pontoon. They served us a good lunch, but I’m the water as much as time allows, about and hour and a half. The temperature is 26 degrees, 79 Fahrenheit, or the same as the water at Jedediah Island last summer. Visibility about 30 feet. It doesn’t feel very warm, and the air temperature is about the same.

    pontoon sign at barrier reef

    Returning to the ship, I’m feeling too lazy to even serve myself supper, so I change my clothes and dine in the formal dining room and let them serve me. We are underway for Brisbane now.

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