Tuesday, 3 September 2024

Bohemian Rhapsody

On August 30th, we flew to Prague via Dubai on a giant Airbus A380 jumbo, as part of a trip to see Prague, Vienna and Budapest, followed by a visit to friends in St Tropez.


Historical overview from our preparation blog.



Airbus A380 in Dubai


Restaurant near our AirBnB in the Malá Strana area.


Plenty statues. Statues seem to belong to one of two categories: suffering pious saints or naked women.


Prague Old Car for tourists


Czech wood-carvings


Plenty tourists. A group pouring off the famous Charles Bridge.


A city of spires

Czechia was the site of many religious conflicts. The part of it around Prague is known as Bohemia, where opposition to the Catholic Church first emerged with the followers of Jan Hus (1370 – 1415). 


Jan Hus memorial

The Holy Roman Empire, and the Habsburg Empire attempted to suppress the Hussites. The statues on the Charles Bridge can be understood as political symbols celebrating Catholic saints, and asserting Catholic supremacy. 




Three chained Christians, captives of the Turks in the Crusades, are praying for salvation.


Statue on Charles Bridge



Charles the Fourth (1316 – 1378)


View from our AirBnB window


Dimitri, our tour guide and history teacher.


The Vltava River


One arch of the Charles Bridge




Church of Our Lady before Tyn





Prague Castle & St Vitus Cathedral





There are eight statues around the clock; here are some close-ups.


Vanity & Greed                                                       Death & Lust         


                   Philosopher & Archangel Michael                        Astronomer & Chronicler






Tram in Malá Strana


Friendly locals



Friendly drunk Polish tourists


Stodgy food


Warm weather


Changing of the guard at Prague Castle


St Vitus cathedral, part of the Prague Castle complex


St Vitus nave


Stained glass window


A relaxing drink beside the Vltava River


Bread shop


Cream buns




Petrin Tower


A house sign. Some houses have these from a time before many people could read numbers.


Steak flambé at U Modré kachničky restaurant

Thoughts about Prague

Five nights. Plenty, but not nearly enough. Enough to see some of the major tourist hotspots, but it would take years to get into the soul of this fascinating and creative culture. We in Australia joke about an archaic line in our national anthem 'Girt by sea'. But the idea behind it is profound, the more obviously so when one visits countries whose boundaries have shifted many times, and also been penetrated by more powerful neighbours like the Holy Roman Empire, the Habsburg Empire, the Nazis and the Communists.

The Prague Spring in 1968 was a time of hope disappointed by the Warsaw Pact invasion. The Velvet Revolution of 1989 was a sort of miracle.

I came across this passage written by one of the participants in that revolution.

‘The first few years after the revolution were simply one big party. But there was a lot at stake. It was necessary to prove to the world and to ourselves that we were not some remote Soviet guberniya, but a nation securely anchored in the spirit of Charter 77 and in its recent democratic tradition, capable of immediately ridding itself of party bosses and secret police officers, of leaving the Warsaw Pact or abolishing it outright, of sending off the Soviet army, of identifying and where possible rectifying the crimes of the past, of coming to terms with Stalinism and the executions and concentration camps of the fifties, of transforming capital, again making friends with the Germans and the rest of the world, no longer harassing the Gypsies/Roma, breaking peacefully with the Slovaks (since that’s what they wanted), massively investing in culture and science, showering and smiling every day, letting our agriculture blossom and also our healthcare system, industry and small trades, of fostering social life and local clubs, including musical ensembles, amateur theatre and beautification societies, of shrinking the nation’s obesity to a minimum, of learning English, never ever again oppressing women, living environmentally, joining NATO and the European Union, and so on.”


Jáchym Topol, With a Passion for Freedom, 2014

Heady stuff!

Some interesting people came from, or were associated, with Prague. Here are a few.

Friday, 21 June 2024

June 2024 cruise in Antidote

1st June. We flew to Rockhampton, provisioned in Yeppoon and got to the boat at the Keppel Bay Marina in time to go to a restaurant 'Beaches' for dinner.

2nd June. A second visit to the shops and the fish co-op, before we set sail for Great Keppel Island, and anchored at Svendsen's Beach.

3rd June. An early start to get to Port Clinton in good time. Popped the kite as the sun came up. A gorgeous sail.


We went ashore to pick up some oysters off the rocks. Not as good as a previous visit.


4th June. A short hop around the coast to Delcomyn Bay for lunch. This pretty bay is open to the south-east, so rarely comfortable during the South-East trade winds. But it was very calm when we were there, so a good time to check it out.


Delcomyn Bay


And on to Pearl Bay for the night.



Leaving Pearl Bay at dawn

5th June.

Another short hop around the coast to Island Head Creek. Lovely coastline.



6th June. A bigger jump north from Island Head Creek to South Percy Island. Sunrise start again.




7th June. From South Percy to Curlew Island. A fast reach.



Curlew Island


The drone showed we were closer to underwater obstructions than we had realised, so we moved.

8th June. A beautiful kite run from Curlew to Scawfell Island. We caught a mackerel tuna which became delicious sashimi.


Mackerel tuna


We were also accompanied by a pod of dolphins.





Scawfell is a very attractive island, with moorings, beaches and coral for snorkeling. 


Sunset at Scawfell Island

9th June. From Scawfell to Thomas Island. A beautiful spot. 

Again, we left as the sun came up.


10th June. Thomas Island to Shaw Island and Lindeman Island. We climbed Mount Oldfield, which has some great views over the Whitsundays. Lots of grass trees everywhere.



Looking south-west. The resort is being renovated; after Club Med, it has now been bought by an up-market Singaporean chain.


Pentecost Island, looking north.


Looking south-east through a gap in Shaw Island.

11th June. Shaw Island to Hamilton Island, to refuel, wash clothes and shop in the IGA. The chandlery is limited and quite expensive. Then on to Cid Harbour for the night.


12th June. We climbed Whitsunday Peak in the morning. Some drone photos gave a better view.


Looking north to Dugong Inlet, Hook Passage, Macona Inlet and Nara Inlet.


Looking south over Whitsunday Peak to Gulnare Inlet, Hamilton Island and Shaw Island.


Looking west over Cid Harbour, Cid Island, Whitsunday Passage, South Molle and the mainland.

We moved over to Macona Inlet for the night.


13th June. Back to May's Bay. One of our favourite anchorages. Peaceful, private, and usually with some Telstra coverage. We needed an uptodate weather forecast.

14th June. An early start to sail out to Bait Reef, part of the Great Barrier Reef. 


Perfect conditions.


A Spanish Mackerel


On a mooring in Bait Reef. Antidote is the nearer boat.


Easy to see from the drone. Harder at the surface. The 'Stepping Stones' are to the right of a beacon, which one should leave to starboard when entering to find a mooring.


The scene at day-break. Strange to be in glassy conditions 20 nautical miles out in the ocean.

15th June. Dodgy weather was forecast, which is not pleasant on the Reef, so we sailed back to Tongue Point on Whitsunday Island. 


Hill Inlet from Tongue Point. See Whitehaven Beach in the distance.


16th June. Round to the amazing Whitehaven Beach; 5km of perfect silica sand the consistency of icing sugar. It is periodically voted 'The Best Beach in the World'.


Pentecost Island, looking south-west from Whitehaven Lookout.


Whitehaven Beach, looking north from above the lookout.

17th June. Whitsunday and Hook Islands effectively block all Telstra signals, so after a few days Internet Withdrawal Syndrome symptoms were starting to appear! So we had a brisk sail over to Happy Bay on Long Island, within line of sight to a Telstra tower near Shute Harbour.


Yet another defunct resort!

18th June. A short move to South Molle Island, with some pleasant walks.


South Molle 


View east towards Planton Island and Cid Harbour beyond.

19th June. A gentle sail from South Molle over to Chalkies Beach on Haslewood Island to check out the snorkeling options for an incoming grand-daughter. Looks good. But a bit rocky, so we went back to Whitehaven Beach for the night.


With Anna, Aelie, and Sim


Aelie with Granny George in Gulnare Inlet


Rainy weather with Gulnare looking Norwegian

A fabulous cruise, with perfect weather until the last few days. Sunny with 10-15 knots of South-east trade winds behind us.