Specifications Specifications Inventory Crew Charter Options bookings Prices Captain's Log and Current Articles Tour Photos

Captain's Log and Current Articles

TIAMA appears in the press regularly, some of the articles are reproduced here. There is also an update on where TIAMA is now, and some of her recent exploits.


TIAMA IN THE PRESS
CURRENT VOYAGE LOGBOOK

These articles in PDF format cover some of Tiama's adventures around the globe.

Beyond the Furious Fifties  (pdf 1.6mb)
Expedition to the Balleny Isles with Dr Franz Smith
Forest and Bird Magazine Feb 2007

End of the Line (pdf 4.8mb)
The MFish expedition to the Balleny Isles -Shelly Far Biswell
NZ Geographic Magazine April 2007

In the wake of David Lewis part one (pdf 2.2mb)
Scientific Expedition to the Balleny Isles - Henk Haazen
Professional Skipper Magazine April 2007

In the wake of David Lewis part two (pdf 2.5mb)
Scientific Expedition to the Balleny Isles - Henk Haazen
Professional Skipper Magazine June 2007

Not for the faint-hearted! (pdf 2.13mb)
Feature article on TIAMA, New Zealand's most useful yacht
Trade-a-Boat 2005

Lonely Research (pdf 1.09mb)
10 weeks in the Antipodes Islands
Cruising World 2005

Munificence at the Bounties (pdf 399kb)
A virginal dive spot in the Roaring Forties
Trade-a-Boat 2004

Ships wait for nightfall to elude flotilla (pdf 399kb)
Two ships loaded with Plutonium pass protesting yachts in the Tasman Sea
NZ Professional Skipper 2002

Cold Climbing - Part 1 (pdf 1.43mb)
Tackling unclimbed peaks in Antarctica
Australian Geographic 2000

Cold Climbing - Part 2 (pdf 2.47mb)
Tackling unclimbed peaks in Antarctica
Australian Geographic 2000

Ice with that sir?(pdf 897kb)
A voyage around Cape Horn
NZ Listener 1999

Rainbow Warrior Veteran Launches Dream
Henk Haazen launches his self-built 15-metre yacht
Sea Spray 1998
(pdf 1.21mb)

Yacht built for Antarctic Studies (pdf 633kb)
Building a yacht capable of carrying scientific reseach and environmental groups to Antarctica
NZIS 1993

Back to Top


CURRENT VOYAGE LOGBOOK

For the 2008/09 southern summer season TIAMA is  working from  Bluff, New Zealand's southernmost port and gate-way to the Antarctic and Sub Antarctic. Chartering to NIWA, Dep of Conservation, Government and  private charters most of them to the sub Antarctic islands..

PREVIOUS VOYAGE UPDATES.

Auckland New Zealand 15 July 2006
We have spent another summer plowing through the Southern Ocean, coming and going from the blustery little port of Bluff at the bottom of New Zealand.

A total of 12 trips to the Sub Antarctic, including 2 trips to Macquarie island  which is half way down between NZ and the Antarctic.  Its  a small long skinny island  in the middle of the Southern Ocean with so many penguins on some of the beaches that you can not see the end of the colonies. We were providing transport for  a BBC film crew. There is  no real anchorage at Macquarie Island and it has a seemingly constant rolling surf on the beach all of  which makes life interesting and does not help the grey hair department.

 

Most of the other  work we have been doing has a conservation/research twist to it.  We do seem to spend a lot of time with slightly eccentric sea bird researchers   onboard taking them to and from  the fair flung NZ Sub Antarctic islands where they  try to determine the impact different fisheries techniques have on the various albatross populations.  About   75% of the worlds albatross come to the NZ sub Antarctic islands for breeding.

The health of the populations also reflect the state our planet is in and in a way act as a barometer for the impacts of climate change. At times the crew get the opportunity to get our hands dirty working with the different albatross species as field assistants, this is great.  Funny how one ends up growing a passion for the big bird, I had never imagined myself as a bird person but  they truly are amazing creatures.

 

Another interesting job was providing logistical support for 2 geologists from the NZ  Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences surveying the outer and very exposed West coast of Fiord land. They were for sure in the eccentric department. We dropped them off on some amazing rock outcrops carrying  a big  geologist hammer, and then picked them up again in what were at times challenging circumstances without letting them drop in the water,  a good thing really as they usually had a big bag full of rock specimens between them.

 

We celebrated the tenth  birthday of Tiama on 7 December last year, she has 90,000 nautical miles under her keel and is going strong. It is interesting to see that a lot of the  gear and equipment starts giving up after 10 years of hard work.  During this winters maintenance period I will be replacing the stainless steel standing rigging, diesel heater,  wind generator, gas cooker, next year the main engine and hull sandblasting is on the list.

That is boats for you, as one hardware retailer  in Invercargill once told me , we are not here to make money we are just here to make friends .

 

And having fun of course, we still do that although at the end of the summer charter season it almost starts feeling like a real job, but that is only when we come and go from port, dealing whit yet another bag full of  laundry and a never ending grocery shopping list.  The actual time at sea still has plenty  of challenges. The southern ocean is forever changing and not to be underestimated.

Cheers
Henk

 

 

Auckland New Zealand27 July 2006

In the Footsteps of David Lewis, Tiama to the Ice.

It has been the biggest year to date and top of the list was our 5 week trip to the Balleny Islands at 66 degrees 50 minutes south. They are on the NW corner of the Ross Sea, mainland Antarctica and 1,200 miles due south of New Zealand.

A charter for the New Zealand Ministry of Fisheries, doing an underwater dive survey of the coastline; bird and seal counts, as well as taking biopsy samples of humpback whales.

I just wished that they had picked a different part of the Antarctic to go to. The Balleny Islands have the distinguished reputation of being a hard place to reach and an even harder place to do work.

Before we left I spent large amounts of time looking at ice charts and consulting with ice experts, skippers and weather experts.  Most of them agreed that it was a bold but feasible plan. There were a few notable exceptions remarking I was a braver man than them to go there in such a small vessel. Of course one gets a bit worried about these sorts of remarks from knowledgeable people, but after analyzing and discussing all the various points of view I felt that it was possible to do it within acceptable safety parameters

The island group is very, very remote, rarely visited and locked in the ice for about 10 months of the year. The west coast of the island group is only ice free for about one month of the year and sometimes it does not get free of the pack ice at all.

No small boat had been to the Balleny islands since David Lewis visited them briefly 28 years ago on Solo.  The island group is situated in the friction zone between the permanent Antarctica high and southern ocean lows. 

During our southbound voyage we had favorable westerly to north westerly winds 35 to 45 knots. Tiama loves this sort of breeze lapping it up under storm tri-sail and hurricane jib with a drop of Genoa rolled out when needed.  For this voyage I fitted a very small jib on the inner forestay. This was a tiny bit of rag built like a brick shit house and a beautiful thing to have in a stiff breeze.

The day we arrived it was flat calm with 3 humpback whales on the port bow. Work began immediately photographing their flukes for later identification and taking biopsy samples. On that first day we got several good fluke shots and one biopsy sample which was a good start for the science program.

This was real scientific whaling, unlike the slaughter that was taking place 2000 miles due east by the so called scientific Japanese whaling ships. It was good to know that my old Greenpeace colleagues were there at the same time trying to stop them.

We managed to carry out 90 % of the scientific program, which was a bit ambitious to start with.   The 4 scientists onboard worked hard, doing on average 2 dives a day in minus 1.5 degree waters, ice all around, and chilly just to watch. It was cold enough for the fresh water tanks on board to start freezing up.

The weather gods treated us kindly for this expedtion, and although all the historic records of the Balleny islands state that there is no shelter for boats, we managed to find shelter where previously nobody had found any. I think this was mainly due to the different view seen through the eyes of a small boat skipper compared to the view from the bridge of a big ship.  We can turn around on a penny, have a lifting keel that can reduce our draft from three meters to 1.2 meters in a few minutes and can find shelter in shallow waters behind cliffs, sand spits and islands.

Most of the better places to park for the night were close to the partly ice free Capes of the bigger islands or on the sides of the smaller islands that had more gently sloping hills and lower cliffs. Here we could get close in and find bottom without the threat of a house sized lump of ice landing on the deck. Unfortunately none of the anchorages that we found allowed for the luxury of the whole crew sitting down below over a glass of wine. We always had to have one person on worry duty topsides.

The North Eastern Cape of Buckle Island was by far the worst place that we used.  Anchoring in 80 meters of water with 120 meters of chain out is not really anchoring. It is more like having a small precarious foot hold. This foothold was accompanied by an active calving glacier 600 meters away, which sent regular small rivers of ice our way, bumping and scraping along the hull, which you can imagine meant none of us slept well that night.

For the trip back up north we had not so favorable west to North West winds, 3 big systems came through peaking at 55 knots each. Tiama is just a great deep sea boat, beautiful to watch as she works her way through the water, scary at times for sure, but just right.

We arrived back in Bluff March 5th, after 5 weeks at sea, with only a few minor cases of cabin fever onboard. I’m happy to report that we did not break much gear. In fact I only spent $150 in the hardware shop to replace a few lost and broken items. This is less then what we break on our regular NZ Sub-Antarctic trips.

I know that one needs drama to make a good story, so be assured the trip did make my hair go a bit greyer. Our contact at the Ministry of Fisheries asked on our return if we wanted to do another trip. I agreed to do so but suggested that we should have a year break in between to give the skipper a chance to catch his breath and put his feet by the fire at home.

 We did another refit on Tiama  before this expedtion and she is now fitted out with dive compressor, dive bottles etc for remote expedition dive work; a top of the range depth sounder which can record up to 700 meters and log depths, course, position, barometric pressure etc in a spread sheet form…. very fancy gear.

The remainder of the southern summer season was spent sailing to the NZ Sub Antarctic islands supporting various research programs.  One notable trip was collecting mushrooms for an American university sponsored by National Geographic with a weird, wonderful and eccentric bunch of scientists onboard. But nothing quite as exciting as the Balleny islands.

For the winter months we are back in Auckland doing maintenance work etc. Looks like  next summer we will be working again from the Port of Bluff sailing to the NZ sub Antarctic islands.

Tiama and her crew are well, Ruby has gotten her first commercial boat operator’s certificate, and occasionally sails as mate onboard Tiama. Bunny is desk bound at Greenpeace New Zealand. And I’m floating about as happy as ever.

Kind regards

Henk

 

 Auckland NZ March 2005

Dear all

For the  southern summer of 2004-05 we had  a big contract with the NZ Dept of Conservation, supporting their research work to the NZ sub Antarctic islands, our first expedition started on 4 November 2004 and we  finished early April 2005. In all we did 9 trips south, We had the normal succession of weather systems that you expect for these latitudes, although we did encounter one rather large wave that took out the Port wheelhouse window, this was a bit of a dramatic moment, but no serious damage was done and after some temporary repairs Tiama carried on in a safe and sound manner.

The other development is that we have set up a sailing school  working with the  NZ Coastguard and the Royal Yachting association, we are now a recognized coastguard/RYA training centre, yours truly is  a qualified yachtmaster instructor,  Our  website for the school, www.sailing.school.nz  please have a look, we plan to specialize in coastal passages for   people new to sailing, or for those who want to get their coastal skippers ticket or just want to do a few good sea miles.

Hope your all well and happy.

By the way, my old computer died a violent death last week, so I have lost a lot emails and addresses,  to my surprise the world has kept on turning, sorry if this not to your old email address.

Cheers

Henk

 

 Port Moresby P.N.G. August 2003

Dear all

Tiama is nearing the end of its long and very successful campaign trip in to the Western Province of PNG Thank you to everyone from around the world who  supported us in this part of our campaign work . The incredible progress that we have made on the Kiunga  imbak campaign and the ground work that we are having on RH are a tribute to the org, to our supporters,  and particularly the many wonderful people who have worked with us on the campaign over the last three months. The success that we are having belongs to us all.

Recent events and happenings:

1. Last week the team spent six days on the ground of the Rimbunan Hijau logging concession of Wawoi  Guavi. RH, from Malaysia, is one the largest, most destructive and aggressive logging companies in the world. We documented the logging, environmental  impact, the stories of the people and gathered a large amount of photographs and evidence that will help us in our coming campaign work. The general feeling with the locals was that an RH supporter had done some  puri puri (traditional magic) on our camp, which caused  to rain most of the time.  As if we don't have enough logistical challenges!  The team regularly came back covered from head to toe with mud.

 Henry, Dorothy and Sep had a meeting with landowners from the Kamula Dosa and Wawoi fallls. We have had various warnings that a lot of these folk were not interested talking to us, it turns out they see all ngo's as the same and weren't aware of what GP does and why we were here. After a lengthy meeting the campaign team were very pleased with the support and feedback they received as this is an important area. David and Geoff have been getting plenty of breaches of the forestry code of practice. Sandy has some great photos and very passionate testimonials of affected landowners. On Saturday the team entered Komusie - the heart of the RH operations in Western Province. This is RH's saw mill and veneer plant. The team was interviewed during the day by the notorious One Eye known for committing various human rights abuses in Bouganville and also at Komusie. He was accompanied by an AK47    carrying thug. After a lengthy and heated discussion between One Eye, Dorothy and the photographer Sandy, he left us to our final hour's work

 This morning the Tiama sailed past Panikawa - RH's other mill on the Wawoi River. The onboard team stood on the yacht wearing "Stop Forest Crime" t-shirts which we photographed. This was the first piece of overt public protest during this trip, but a fitting message to the company that we hope to take on in a concerted  and public way in the near future, and who had made  our lives so very difficult for the last three weeks.

SV Tiama will arrive in Port Moresby in the middle of  next week after three months fantastic field work and we will start packing up, debriefing, and planning for  he next steps. Against the many obstacles we have faced in the last few weeks we have managed to  get into the concessions and make some solid progress for our campaign.   From the export point, to all the way up the rivers and into the concessions  the locals now know about Greenpeace and what we stand for.  It is early days but   we have been laying a good foundation for our future work.

Best regards and thanks

Stephen Campbell  

The GPAP Forest campaign team.

Sorry there are a few updates missing  for 2001 and 2002  due to a computer crash.

Our main activity during this time was chartering in the NZ Sub Antarctic and taking part in the Tasman nuclear free flotilla.

Sydney Australia 10 January 2001

Dear all

You might have wondered (or not) what happened to Tiama and her crew for the last year or so, and what we are up to at present. Well, wonder no more all will be revealed if you care to read on.

The new millennium started well for us with a charter to the Antipodes. The Antipodes are some of New Zealand's sub-Antarctic islands. The job involved us filming the first sunrise of the new millennium and it was a spectacular one. We then beamed the image out live onto the internet via a huge inmarsat-B mounted on the aft deck especially for the occasion (which looked rather silly).

Directly after this Henk went up to the Arctic to go camping on the ice. He was part of a Greenpeace campaign against offshore oil developments in Prudhoe bay Alaska. The camp was at 70 degrees north and it was late

winter when it tends to be a bit chilly so yours truly got a bit of a nip here and there. The campaign did make a difference and has has some impact on BP's attitude regarding oil exploration versus the development of

renewable energy.

We (Bunny, Ruby, Henk) spent the next 6 months in Amsterdam, Bun had a 6 month job there being very busy as the Nukes Coordinator for GPI, while Ruby went to school and Henk tried to be a good house father.

During this time Tiama was patiently waiting for us tied to mangrove trees in her mud berth, on Waiheke Island in Auckland.

Currently we are  working with Greenpeace's Nuclear Campaign - being part of a flotilla of local boats that are organising to go out and protest in the Tasman Sea, between New Zealand and Australia - where there are large number of shipments of plutonium fuel and nuclear waste  passing throug on their way between Japan and Europe.

At present we are moored in Sydney Australia, just about to start a tour of a few south Australian cities with Tiama to raise the profile of Australia's nuclear ambitions and involvement in shipping nuclear materials across the oceans.the

So as you can see we try and keep ourselves usefully occupied, and make a few waves here and there.

Tiama is great as always, still a wonderful boat,  we  put some more equipment and gear onboard, including an inmarsat mini-M and a inmarsat-C so we can now make phone calls and do emails at sea,  (no escaping for us anymore, although it does have an off button ha.).

Best wishes to all of you for the new year 2001 ?????? time is flying when you are having fun.

Cheers, Henk, Bunny, Ruby.

Cairns Australia, September 5, 1999

Dear everyone,

It has been a while since our last update and we have done a few miles since then so we thought it about time to catch you all up.

The last time we wrote in February we were sailing up the Chilean channels to Puerto Montt. Since that time Henk has been home to the Netherlands and up to the Arctic  - not on the boat - checking out the possibilities for chartering there, Bunny and Ruby returned to NZ for three months as Bunny’s father was unwell.

On the 4 of June Henk departed from Puerto Monttt, Chile with Tiama heading for Australia  (a 7500 mile voyage across the “big pond” pacific ocean) with brief stops in Easter Island, Pitcairn, the Cooks island and Fiji.  Bunny and Ruby rejoined Tiama in the Cook Islands in July and we arrived here in Cairns, Australia on 7 August.

The Pacific surely is big and relatively empty of boats we only met one other boat during the crossing, this was at about the half way point (3500 miles out of Chile, mid Pacific) at about dusk we heard somebody with a polish accent making a call for the vessel under the full moon (us), it turned out to be  old fiends from NZ on their boat Nanu who were on there way from NZ to Chile, the likely hood of meeting up with somebody like that is very very remote and here we were on a collision course with them, amazing.

We are working here with Greenpeace Australia for the next three months on a climate change campaign along the Great Barrier Reef. Parts of the reef was badly bleached in 1998 when the water temperatures were unusually high.  A lot of the coral died during that event. Our effort is focused on reaching the public and making the links between the bleaching of the coral reef with the new oil from shale rock development in Gladstone which is just south of here on the coast. The idea being that investment should be into renewable energy such as wind and solar rather than into fossil fuels like oil which are the main causes of climate change. There is a window of opportunity before the oil development goes commercial to stop it by getting the public involved in the Environmental Impact Assessment process.  We are doing open days with the boat and taking people out to see the good, the bad and the ugly on the reef and generally being a platform for Greenpeace to reach the public about the issue. There is a good bunch of people from Greenpeace Australia on the land side of things that we are working with.

The first 10 days here we spent taking Dr Roger Grace, an underwater photographer, David Wooly a cameraman, and a couple of scientists to the spots on the reef that were badly bleached during the 1998 bleaching event. We saw some beautiful coral and some damaged and dead coral. We also saw turtles and manta rays and Ruby got to swim with a mama humpback and her calf that came right up to the boat, which was pretty awesome at the same time as being pretty scary.

We will be here until the end of November and at this point we are planning on being back in NZ over the Christmas/ New Century season unless a job we just can’t resist somewhere cold comes up.

We are all doing fine and enjoying a bit of sunshine, Tiama is going great we haven’t seen a boat we like better yet doubt we ever will.

Cheers Bunny, Ruby, Henk

 

Ushuaia - Chilean channels- Puerto Montt Chili April 1999

Dear friends

Our first season working in the Antarctic Peninsula and the Cape horn region has finished. We are now in Puerto Montt a small port in southern Chile, the gateway to the Chilean channels that lead south to Cape Horn.

From Ushuaia (Argentina) we sailed up the channels of southern Chile, they form a true 1000 mile long maritime maize it is a series of steep flanked and wooded fjord’s and islands with what must be a 1000 different mostly unexplored anchoress, a very remote region only accessible by boat, It has lots of huge glaciers around you can sail up to them getting some ice for you drinks. It is a region were one could spend a lifetime and still you would not have visited everything.

We had a great season and the boat lived up to all her expectations and more we had some great experiences with the various people who chartered Tiama for the last few months and are looking forward to continuing in the same vain.

Bye for now

Henk, Bunny and Ruby

 

Ushuaia Argentina - Antarctic Peninsula February 8, 1999

Dear all,

We’re have returned from our first Antarctic expedition. We arrived back in Ushuaia the night of Feb. 4th after beating our way up the Beagle for the last five hours.  It was an adventure for all on board Tiama.

We had good crossings of the Drake Passage – 650 miles each way between Cape Horn and the Antarctic Peninsula – taking 3-4 days both ways, although the Australian climbers on board thought that climbing their peak would be easy after sailing the Drake Passage.

We knew we had arrived at the gateway to the Antarctic when a huge blue white iceberg emerged out of the fog. From then on we spent the whole trip invariably being awed, humbled, set on edge and elated by the sheer enormity of Antarctica in every sense and the weather that it can throw at you, sometimes with very little warning. It certainly keeps you on your toes and all your antennae finely tuned to what is happening around you. It is hard not to use every superlative I know to describe this place.  The forces of nature at work in Antarctica that you can see and feel are so overpowering It certainly gives you some perspective about your place in the scheme of things which also makes you feel very very hopeful. Nature rules!!!  

It was a brilliant sunny  day  when  we landed the climbers near their peak. Unloaded all the gear in about four hours, organized a radio and pick up schedule and headed out to find a safe anchorage to wait.  We finally picked them up again 12 days later. They had climbed their peak and were pretty pleased with how everything had worked out. Again there was good weather for the pick up although we had to weave our way in and around icebergs much larger than  Tiama to get to the shore where they were waiting.

After that there were still 14 days to explore Antarctica which we did.  A wonderful time, saw a lot of whales – so many that after the 10th time when the cry “whales on the port bow” was called, someone down below yelled back ‘what sort?”

Spent hours watching penguins literally popping out of the water and standing around in their hundreds looking after their chicks, or leopard seals slumbering on ice flows or sleekly hiding out by ice bergs waiting for a penguin to swim by. The wildlife is abundant and the first reaction is not fear of humans. It’s possible to sit and watch all this taking place just five meters away from you.

The climbers turned into pretty good sailors after they returned, expert zodiac drivers and  learning  fast how to moor TIAMA with steel strops and lines to rocks ashore in whatever anchorage we had chosen for that night. They were still ‘peak spotting’ and planning and scheming for their next trip. There are so many magnificent peaks that just rise straight out of the water, it is easy to see why it attracts climbers. Ruby (our 10-year-old daughter) of course now wants to climb mountains. She had a great time and was completely enthralled by the wildlife.

We had some weather, mostly when we were well tacked down for the night. We recorded 65 knots while at anchor in Pleneau with six heavy mooring lines to shore. Tiama did really well, was comfortable in the ice, and we were in amongst a bit of thick brash and ice flows at times, navigating in poorly charted waters and anchorage’s where bumping into the odd rock is common.

Now we are busy preparing for the next voyage, up the Chilean Channels. We leave on February 11 with a friend from NZ and a Danish couple that we met here. It will take a month to get up to Puerto Montt. We are all looking forward to this as it is supposed to be spectacular.  From Puerto Montt we will be heading North making our way up towards Alaska were we will spend the northern summer season.

We are all doing fine, loving our adventures and missing you all.

Cheers Henk, Bunny and Ruby

Auckland New Zealand- Cape Horn November 1998.

We are busy stowing gear and stores under blue spring skies preparing to head off in a few days time for what is considered one of the classic sea voyages.

On November 4 we depart Auckland, New Zealand with 8 on board to set sail across the Southern Ocean for Ushuaia, Argentina. The ages of our crew range from our 10 year old daughter to our 63 year old mate David, mostly New Zealanders with the odd Dutchman thrown in, and includes three females and 5 males. We will call in at the Chatham Islands 3-4 days sail from Auckland. From there the plan is to cross at approx. 50 degrees until we are about half way across and then head South to round Cape Horn. We are anticipating a crossing of approx. 30 days arriving early December.

Our next charter starts on January 2, 1999 when we will pick up the Young Australian Antarctic Expedition (6 climbers) from Ushuaia and take them to the Antarctic Peninsula where they intend to climb the so far unclimbed Pilcher Peak. Our ETA back in Ushuaia is 5 February and we currently have space available for possible charters around Tierra del Fuego and the Chilean channels for February or March.

Best regards, Bunny, Henk and Ruby

 

Auckland New Zealand - Kermadec islands February 1998

Dear Friends

Tiama's maiden voyage was great the boat did really well and we managed to achieve all our objectives.  This included a first recorded (not so easy) landfall on Cheeseman island collecting geological specimens for the  Auckland Museum, for the purpose of dating the islands.

We also delivered some cargo and mail to the NZ Department of Conservation  (DOC) personnel stationed on Raoul Island, the Northern most of the  Kermdacs. TVNZ, who was on board in the form of Bruce Adams captured the work being done by DOC and their volunteers who are trying to rid the Islands of introduced weeds, cats and rats. Raoul has a remarkable boat  launching and cargo loading and unloading system using what must be the world's biggest and best flying fox.

The Kermadec islands are  small volcanic islands sticking out in the middle  of the Pacific and even on a nice day there is a big sea swell on a cliff  faced and rocky coast, not appealing for boat landings But a good time was  had by all onboard.

Now its full on preparations for the Southern Ocean crossing (leaving NZ November 1) and rounding Cape Horn to station ourselves in Ushuaia Argentina) in preparation for a January 2 departure to the Antarctic Peninsula acting as the logistical support vessel to a party of 6 Australian Mountaineers who will attempt to climb Pilchner peak (another  first), should be fun

Kind Regards

...

 

Back to Top


Owner and Charter Agent:
Henk Haazen - Waterline Yachts,
Unit 7b/
148 Quay street,Auckland Central, New Zealand
Ph: (64-9) 372 3105;
Mobile: (021) 534 003 E-mail: tiama@clear.net.nz

?>