1st May 2012
Beach walking at McKenzie’s Jetty Ruins
25’24.427 S – 153’00.612 E
Sunny, warn, patchy cloud, occasional showers.
We decide to move further up the Straits to North White
Cliff where there is on old jetty in ruins. This is McKenzie’s Jetty in
Kingfisher Bay, built back in the logging days on Fraser Island. Timber logging
is thought to have started in the 1860’s by hardened fellers Yankee Jack Piggot,
the McKenzie’s’ and the Hines’ from Maryborough and continued until 1991 when
the Fraser Island was listed as being World Heritage. The main timber being
taken from Fraser Island was Satinay (Fraser Is Turpentine), Kauri Pine, Brush
Box, Tallowood, Blackbutt and Cypress. Satinay is very hardy, resistant to marine
borers and was used mainly for jetties and general marine areas. Some of the
timber from Fraser Island can even be found on jetties in the Suez Canal.
ALANA ROSE anchored off McKenzies Jetty |
During WWII an area close by McKenzie’s Jetty was used by
Special Forces (Services Reconnaissance Dept – “Z Special Unit) as a training
camp. Also know as Fraser Commando School where thousands of soldiers were
trained in jungle warfare. The conditions on Fraser Island were not dissimilar
to those found on the Pacific Islands where the Japanese were fighting. The
Z-Force’s most famous special mission was a raid on a Singapore Harbour which
end in the team of only 12 men, sinking 40,000 tonnes of ships in one night.
It took us less than two hours to motor-sail to North
White Cliff – no good going any further when there is not much wind. Today we go
ashore to walk the long golden sand of Kingfisher Bay. The beach is scattered
with thousands of tiny Soldier Crabs scurrying in the wake of our footsteps. Soldier
Crabs live on the east coast of Australia; they are about 1.5 cm wide and have
a small, round, blue body. They have long jointed legs with purple stripes. As they
move they place sand into their mouths with their pincers eating the small
particles of dead plants and animals, leaving behind small, cleaned round
pellets of sand. Rarely seen alone, Soldier crabs congregate into armies of
hundreds and sometimes thousands, giving them their name Soldier Crab. When
they are in their group they move together in the same direction. Unlike other
crabs, they can walk forward as well as sideways.
Tiny Soldier Crab |
John has to pry me
off the beach, away from the jetty, the Soldier Crabs and the tree debris along
the beach; pry me and my camera back in the dinghy and back to ALANA ROSE. I
could have spent many more hours taking a million and one more “just one more
photo”. As it was I must have taken two million photos and John would just keep
walking up the beach or stand in the shade of a jetty pole while I was doing my
own thing.
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