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Delivery Skipper

Delivery Skipper (Master V, Yachtmaster Instructor) Will safely deliver your Yacht, Home and abroad. Experienced, reliable and at competitive rates. Crew provided.

Peter Neaves

Mobile Phone Service +61 (0)412 393 021

pe***@ya*************.au “>Email Us for an Estimate Now

Experience

*I have over 300,000 N/Miles logged
*Crossed the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans
*Several Circumnavigations Australia
*YA sailing instructor since 1990
*Delivering Yachts / Powerboats since 1994
*More than 30 Years of service

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Estimate

Please  E-mail as much information as available in order to receive a competitive delivery estimate.

USEFUL INFORMATION

Vessel Details

Boat Name, Make / Builder, Length overall, Engine Make / Power, Fuel Capacity

Voyage Details

Pick up Location, Delivery Destination, Vessel available from Date, Additional
information.

Owners Details

First name, Last name, E-mail, Street address, City, StatePostal Code, Country
Phone Daytime, Phone Mobile

Email Now

Recommended List of Safety Equipment

Click  this link for Further Information or if you have already received an estimate there is additional information on your Estimate  FAQ’s here

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Further Information

Some points you may consider when deciding whether to employ an experienced, qualified professional Delivery Skipper

Crew supplied
With the an extensive range of crew available, almost two hundred of whom have been on trips with me over the last 25 years coupled with an additional list of several hundred more prospective crew, timely commencement and continuity of your delivery can be assured of.

Weather routing
Whilst underway, assistance from professional Weather Routers and routing services are utilised, as well as all forms of communication for weather updates and forecasts. In remote areas forecasts and routing information is sent directly to my satellite phone.

Experienced passage planning
With over 250,000 nautical miles, and over 25 years experience in yacht deliveries all aspects of passage planning are thoroughly researched and meticulously implemented.

Safety
Our number one priority is the safety of the crew and vessel. This priority is at the forefront of all decisions made in the planning and execution of your yacht delivery.

Minimal damage and Costs
Experience has shown that through conservative sailing and engine use accidental damage and wear and tear can be eliminated or at least kept to a minimum. Please note the insurance of the vessel is the responsibility of the owner at all times.

Equipment checklists and thorough preparation
Knowledge of hundreds of different vessels over the years has contributed to the development of extensive checklists and procedures for preparing your vessel for the voyage yet ensuring minimal additional costs.

Reasonable time frame
Your estimate will include a reasonable time frame from start to finish with due consideration as to the safe yet timely delivery of your vessel.

Feedback and recommendations
On delivery receive feedback, tips and recommendations on suggested modifications/ repairs or how to get the best out of your boat.

Position updates on the web
You, your family and friends can follow the position of your vessel via regular updates to the Internet.

if you have already received an estimate there is additional information on your Estimate  FAQ’s hereFAQ,s on your Estimate

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FAQ’s

The exact dates available may or may not coincide precisely with your current plans. In some peak periods bookings are often taken several months in advance. Although things often change it is recommended bookings are made sufficiently in advance to assure your boat arrives at the earliest and most suitable time. Exact commencement dates are also weather dependant.

Generally I request 50% of my fee plus estimated expenses in advance with the balance remaining due on completion of the delivery.

Your estimate assumes your vessel is in good working order and has the appropriate equipment and safety gear on board for the passage to be undertaken.

The amount estimated is for the full trip and allows for provisioning and preparing the boat as well as possible and probable stops along the way due to weather and other conditions.

Times estimated are start to finish (I am Sydney based) If the delivery it takes longer than estimated I charge only half my usual rate, in other words an incentive for me to complete your delivery ASAP. If your delivery is completed sooner the original amount quoted still applies.

All charts, pilot books, and other equipment supplied are owned by myself. Crew (usually supplied by me) are expected to provide their own personal safety equipment i.e. harnesses, tethers, strobe etc. I will loan these if required in some cases.

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Crew Register

Occasionally when my regular Crew are unavailable and I send out an email to all who have registered on my Web site. Many of the deliveries are on the East Coast of Australia however some are much further afield.

Most crew  come along in order to gain experience and sailing hours. As such most of the positions are unpaid.

Should your travels / plans fit in with the proposed journey please feel free to
contact me. There is no need to respond to any of my mails if the location is
not suitable to you.

Please advise me if you wish to be removed from the database. Your details will
not be supplied knowingly to any other party.

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Carolines Article

The DeliverymanIt takes a spine to be a professional yacht delivery skipper. Sometimes it requires sailing at its toughest, the stuff you’re forced to do when the ‘iron spinnaker’ lets out a gasp and breaks down two days into a nine-day stretch at sea. It’s sailing to test your tenacity, with wave trains roaring past as half your crew heaves over the stern.Peter Neaves is among a handful of full-time professional delivery skippers in Australia. The Sydney-based Neaves, 44, has worked as a sailor for about a decade, but he’s been on the water since he was 10, sailing dinghies around Botany Bay.

In recent years, the rugged former sailing instructor has skippered everything from trimarans to powerboats around countries including the Seychelles, Thailand and Tahiti. Neaves once sailed a classic timber ketch and Newport-Bermuda race winner, Holger Danske, from Tahiti to Sydney. He’s also a sought-after sailor and return delivery skipper across the treacherous ‘paddock’ of Bass Strait for Sydney to Hobart races.

Neaves recently sought crew to help deliver a yacht from Darwin to Perth for its UK-based owner. The prospect of a sail through the tropics sounded idyllic and Neaves has a solid reputation in Sydney sailing circles, so I asked to go along.

Two experienced women sailors and I were to accompany Neaves on the Darwin to Broome leg of the trip, after another man cancelled at the last moment. Megan, 34, had helmed catamarans and dinghies since childhood and had sailed offshore between Sydney and Newcastle. Renee, 29, had trimmed headsails on yachts during the Cruising Yacht Club of Australia’s Winter Racing Series. I was a 37-year-old novice graduate of three short courses at the nearby Pacific Sailing School. It was Renee’s and my first offshore run.

Our delivery yacht was Jucasta, a 38-foot timber Cole sloop. She was about 30 years old, slightly time-scarred and, while sturdy, she was no comfort cruiser by any stretch.  Jucasta’sautopilot was broken and there was no shower on board.

On the first afternoon we sailed from our mooring on Darwin harbour’s Fannie Bay and marvelled at one of the Top End’s iconic sunsets. Spirits were high as we motored out to sea for several hours with the faintest whiffle of breeze.

Neaves set an around-the-clock helming schedule of an hour on, three hours off for everyone: a system he adjusts depending on his crew’s experience and the delivery course. As the ocean transformed into a lilting silver soup, we enjoyed a happy hour of a beer each. Neaves showed us how to use the instruments to follow our course and we began our shifts.

Early the next morning, while crossing Joseph Bonaparte’s Gulf, the weather took a turn. The trade winds which regularly bluster across Australia’s north strengthened to more than 25 knots. Neaves, who’d been expecting some wind from the weather forecast, clambered across the deck with simian agility and reefed the main. The swell had now reached three metres and occasional monstrous waves rose from nowhere, crashing over the bow. “Those are what we call significant waves,” he said, with the humdrum expression of someone who had just shelled a bucket of peas.

At this point, all the colour drained from Renee’s face. She was terrified of taking the helm on her own. “I’m so scared I’ll sink us, I just can’t do it,” she said. Renee then quietly began vomiting over the stern, before retreating downstairs into the saloon. By daylight, as the conditions continued, I also became nauseous, only with far less eloquence. I sputtered over the side in a violent guttural retch. I joined Renee below, while stoic Megan and Neaves continued to take turns at the helm.

Below deck, water steadily dripped into the saloon and onto our beds through cracks in the rubber surrounding the hatches. “Oh, expletive, now we’re sinking,” I thought, but the bilge pump below slurped away solidly. As I staggered to the head to vomit, the craft lurched violently and a couple of unsecured kitchen utensils leapt from their cupboards and clattered across the floor. I somehow reached the toilet in time, and as I threw up, the yacht heeled suddenly to starboard, causing the toilet lid to crash down hard onto the bridge of my nose. I touched my nose and found blood.

By now, we’d been sailing for less than a day, were perhaps 60 nautical miles offshore and the sea that raged above began to slam home the concept of mortality. Kipling once wrote; “That packet of assorted miseries which we call a ship”. Every seafarer sometimes has reason to question their judgment, I thought, but what on earth do we make of those who do this for a living?

Neaves, who has steered the flimsiest craft through the foulest 50-knot squalls, confidently took the helm and then snored loudly on his breaks. He tried to pacify poor Renee; “We’re safe and it’s not as rough up here on deck as it feels below, honestly you’ll feel better if you come up”. He gave me a Phenergon, an antihistamine which provided my first hours’ sleep of the trip, and which, unlike several seasickness pills already taken, worked a treat in no time. Soon I was spotting giant waves while Megan expertly wove the yacht in and out of the swell, surfing the biggest ones. Renee, however, only came up to the cockpit to ask about the nearest port.

Neaves suggested we drop anchor at Cape Talbot, in the Bonaparte archipelago, so we could all get a decent night’s sleep, have a hot meal and dry our mattresses in the following morning’s sun. We sailed into the protected bay and prepared to drop anchor, as the wind petered to almost nothing. Several other yachts were moored there close to shore. While anchoring, Neaves discovered that the motor was damaged. There was a whirring sound, hfft, pfft, then silence. The old diesel engine refused to kick in, so we quickly tacked with the mainsail facing the wind to reverse and secure the anchor.

The next morning, as a government border patrol plane dipped and circled above, radioing ours and the other yachts for course and crew information, a fishing boat motored into the bay. Neaves radioed for help, knowing the boat would have a  ice machine on board and that without power, the food in our refrigerator would soon spoil. Would it be possible for them to bring us some ice, please, and in return, we could pay them or give them some food or beer? Neaves was reluctant to go across in our rubber dinghy, as navigational guides of the area warned that crocodiles have been known to prowl the shallows and bite into softer craft.

The Barra-B was a large fishing boat captained by an affable fellow called Robbie McIntosh, who was fishing with his wife, children and a dreadlocked hand in his twenties. With the generosity of spirit often found among mariners, McIntosh and his young hand fired up their aluminium tender to deliver us some enormous chunks of ice. He said they were heading for Wyndham. The temptation of the sturdy boat was too much for Renee and she begged McIntosh for a lift. “I won’t be any trouble,” she said. We tried to convince her to stay on the yacht but her mind had been made up hours before in the swell. McIntosh obliged, and gained an unexpected passenger and some beer for his return voyage.

Neaves then turned his attention to the engine problem. Manual in hand, he and Megan began dismantling, suspecting an oil filter problem, or that water had seeped into the fuel during the rough crossing. But their efforts brought no joy. The static of the radio soon announced that help was near; another yacht owner moored in the bay had heard Neaves radioing the fisherman and knew we had motor problems. John, an earthy former soldier who had been sailing a large steel-hulled yacht around Australia since his retirement, seemed a veritable grease monkey. “There’s not much I don’t know about those old diesels,” he said, and came over to take a look. After several hours’ tinkering, he threw his hands in the air, promising to return in the morning to try another possible solution.The same night, a young couple in a sleek Beneteau Oceanus 39 called Shining Wolf anchored nearby, radioed to ask if they could come across to say hello. Alison and Mathew had taken a year off work to travel north from Perth to Papua New Guinea, hoping to sell their yacht in Queensland on their return voyage. They had brought their German Shepherd along for the earlier part of the trip, staying close to shore for daily walks. As John obligingly returned the next morning to help Neaves with the motor (without success), they collected Megan and I for a walk along a narrow strip of beach furrowed with crocodile tracks. On the return trip, we inspected their yacht, and they mentioned they had a satellite phone. Megan rang her family to learn that her grandmother had died.

Neaves deemed the motor problem irreparable without parts or a mechanic, so there was nothing to do but return to our course as we’d already lost a day-and-a-half. As soon as we left the protection of the bay, we once again found lumpy seas, filled with the relentless white peaks that Megan called galloping horses. Yet just a couple of hours later, the wind vanished and the waves receded to a gentle lapping. We raised goose wings but the sails luffed in the stillness. Megan helped Neaves to chart our course using the GPS, a process they dubbed ‘navaguessing’. She knew we were gaining little ground under the elusive breeze. We still had solar panels powering batteries for our instruments, mast lights and Neaves’ computer but he warned that if it became overcast or the batteries got low, we’d be unable to flush the toilet or use the bilge. In the meantime, we continued helming around the clock on shifts of 90 minutes on, three hours off, sometimes shrouded under fog so thick that it was impossible to tell where the ocean began and ended. 

On the day of her grandmother’s funeral, Megan sat on the deck and held her own quiet ceremony, scattering some shells into the ocean, writing a poem and burning it, drinking tea and singing a song, ‘Cockles and Mussels’. “Grandma used to play us that song on the piano,” she said. Shortly afterwards, Megan spotted the first of several whales we saw on the voyage. The days that followed were the best of the trip. We showered on the old teak foredeck behind the headsail in our swimmers using buckets of sea water; a ritual with sunsets providing surely the best bathing view on earth. We cooked delicious meals with meat and vegetables in the tiny galley kitchen, the precious ice lasting for the trip.Neaves also taught us how to tie left and right-handed bowlines and half-hitches and other knots; and on clear nights, we practised celestial navigation, using a pointer of the Southern Cross to find South. When the batteries were well charged we sometimes listened to music, including the American singer and sailor Jimmy Buffet’s nautical offerings, the Cruel Sea’s Deliveryman and Vivaldi’s Four Seasons. Neaves glowed with pleasure whenever he told sailing stories. “I can’t imagine getting an office job again,” he said, briefly discussing another existence as a salesman for a photography company. His relaxed demeanour remained unchanged during the nine days whether on choppy or glassy water. As we ranged the western coast of the continent and headed south, our sails filled with wind and we scooted across the surface like a flying fish. “Now this is sailing,” said Neaves. We were about a day out of Broome when we saw the West’s extraordinary moonrise known as the Stairway to Heaven. The moon slowly climbed from a slither on the horizon and smeared the ocean with shimmering ripples of gold. As for most of our voyage, there were no other craft in sight. Haunting strains of the late cellist Jacqueline DuPres’ Elgar Cello Concerto drifted from the CD player. No-one could speak. I understood at that moment exactly why people like Neaves do what they do. 

Kiama to Martha Cove

Position Report and other info UTC (+11 Hrs Sydney Time)

Cut and paste the GPS location below into Google earth, you can place mark This position and follow our Progress. Satellite Phone / SMS no. +61 405 592 606

If not seeing updates check you are on this page Satellite updates Here

Friday, 4 November 2022, 1830 hrs

Sojourn III is now in her New berth! Will update soon but a very big Thank you to the Crew, Nelson, David an JP (John). Not forgetting our shore crew Dinah. Thank you all for making it a safe and pleasant trip despite the weather delays. Hope you can join me again in the future.

Beer o’clock!

1100 Hrs

38 22 S, 144 43 E, A bit frustrating as the wind angle made us have to tack a few too many times yesterday slowing our progress. We are drifting around just 7 Nm from Port Phillip Heads as we need to wait until close to the next slack water at the heads. Anyway we now expect to enter the bay around 1430 Hrs so arrive at our destination around 6pm this evening. Oh well its Friday so hopefully a good pub nearby.

Thursday, 3 November 2022, 1100 Hrs

39 08 S, 146 20 E, We are now off SW Point of Wilsons Promontory, yeah Ha. Heading North and fortunately the wind had dropped by the time we rounded so still on schedule for a Friday afternoon arrival at Martha Cove. Update again tomorrow.

0730 Hrs

Leave Refuge Cove, The weather is expected to improve in the early afternoon. Wilson’s Promontory is still blowing at 35-40 Kts so expecting a very slow rounding before the wind angle improves and starts to drop down. Anyway we are well rested and enjoyed the heater installed on board for a few hours overnight. Damn cold down here.

Wednesday, 2 November 2022

We have moved to Refuge cove now for the night. (3 Nm) Unfortunately we will not have full internet or phone until we are underway in the morning. We are still hoping to be underway on Thursday morning with an ETA for Friday afternoon. Will update again once we are underway.

Tuesday, 1 November 2022, 1300 Hrs

Anchored in Sealers Cove. Based on the current forecasts we intend to leave early Thursday morning for Port Phillip. All going well we hope to make slack water at the Heads around 10 am Friday and then at Martha Cove around 1400 Hrs Friday.

1000 Hrs

38 56 S 146 39 E, Seal Island is 500M to our North and we are heading for Sealers Cove to anchor (12 Nm East) The SW came in right on schedule which sent us a bit North of west overnight. Its been a very slow morning motoring down the coast. As much as I would like to keep moving and there is a chance to make it to Port Phillip heads by Wednesday morning there is a Gale warning for the area for Wednesday making it a bit too risky to attempt outrunning it. Depending on reception will update again later

Lets go Clubbing Tonight !

Seal Island, “Lets go Clubbing Tonight !”

Monday, 31 October 2022, 1200 Hrs

38 26 S, 1489 14 E, Just passing “Kingfisher B” Production Oil well in the Bass Strait oil fields. That puts us pretty much half way through the first leg of the Strait. Currently nice and sunny with a light Northerly breese however that is forecast to change within an hour or so as a SW change moves through. The barometer has dropped significantly so am expecting it will slow our progress significantly. We should have phone reception again in say 24 hrs to get the forecast and decide if we need to anchor again to let this system blow through. All well on board.

Kingfisher B Oil Rig, Bass Strait

Kingfisher B Oil Rig, Bass Strait

Sunday, 30 October 2022, 1200 Hrs

37 33 S, 149 59 E, 2Nm East of Gabo Island. Currently 20Kts blowing from the South slowing our progress however the wind is forecast to drop off soon then start to blow from the NE during the afternoon. The next front coming through on Monday may see us at anchor again at Wilson’s Promontory but hopefully it wont be too strong otherwise it may be Thursday before we can continue on. Regular reception will be sketchy until Wilson’s so will try to update around lunchtime tomorrow via the Satellite phone.

0445 Hrs

Leaving Eden. Underway expecting to motor through the morning before the wind changes to the east in the afternoon. Hoping to get most of the way through the strait before Monday night when a westerly is predicted again. Will update in several hours near Gabo island before reception will start to get intermittent until Wilson’s Promontory.

Friday, 28 October 2022, 2200 Hrs

Anchored in Eden

1100 Hrs

36 17 S, 150 12 E, 2 Nm South of Montague Island making our way to Eden to anchor for Saturday with the view to be leaving early Sunday morning to get through the Strait before the next of the westerly gales blow through. All is well should be anchored around sunset with the current conditions.

Thursday, 27 October 2022, 1430 Hrs

Underway from Shell Cove Marina. Heading next to Eden to Anchor for Friday night / Saturday. Hopefully we will have a small window from Saturday night through to Monday night to get through the Strait. Weather patterns are quite hard to predict at the moment so will be keeping a close eye on it as its looking unstable for the next week but hopefully we can inch our way closer to Melbourne.

Tuesday, 25 October 2022, 1230 Hrs

Arrived Shell Harbour Marina.

1030 Hrs

Leaving Kiama for Shell Harbour. Yesterday with the continual rain and swell and tides made preparations and provisioning quite difficult, with the forecast for Bass Strait from Thursday night on looking a bit dubious we will finish preparations here before moving south with a view to leaving NSW in the best weather window after the westerlies abate on the weekend

Monday, 24 October 2022

In Kiama preparing to depart for Martha Cove tomorrow. Welcome aboard John, David and Nelson

Emergency Contact for this delivery

Dinah Eagle, +61 (0) 475 306 555,

di*********@ho*****.com











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MMSI No.  503598900

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