Authors: Stuart Trueman
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Personal Memoirs
Appendix—Equipment
Nadgee Solo Sea Kayak with trolley system and spare paddles system from Nadgee Kayaks
Sail and mast from Flat Earth Kayak Sails
Dart 2 tent and sand pegs (Sea to Summit)
Sleeping bag
Coolmax sleeping bag liners (Sea to Summit)
Small tarp (Sea to Summit)
¾ Thermarest and ½ foam mat
Trangia cooker
Head torch and spare batteries
Fork, spoon, cup
5-litre portable sink from Sea to Summit
Matches and lighter
2 litres of methylated spirits
First aid kit
Insect repellent
Soap
Toothpaste and toothbrush
Sunscreen
Water purification tablets
Handheld weather recorder
Voice recorder and waterproof container
Shortwave AM/FM radio, ability for Single Side Band (SSB) for weather forecasts, and aerial extension, AA batteries and spare batteries
Reading glasses and case
Waterproof camera and charger
Sailor needle and thread
Duct tape
Spare rope and cord
Fibreglass repair kit and sealant
Maps and waterproof case
Multi-tool
Small mirror
Pen and notebook
Cockpit cover
Two large carry bags
Small collapsible rucksack
Mozzie head net
Pipe, tobacco
Quality polarised sunglasses with case and strap from Spotters
Money, credit card, phone cards
List of phone numbers, emails, web pages for contacts
Pocket knife
Water bottles and Pack Tap (seven 6-litre collapsible water containers from Sea to Summit)
Plastic bags (resealable and others)
Food
‘Pilbara’ wide-brim hat and ‘Mullet’ cap (Sea to Summit)
Items of clothing (would change depending on climate) including: GORE-TEX Paclite Anorak paddling jacket, MsFit Tour PFD, PFD rear pocket, paddling shirt and shorts (all from Kokatat); merino wool and polypropylene thermals and socks from Wilderness Wear; fleece top and trousers from Canoeing Down Under; and Reed kayak jacket from Expedition Kayaks
Pee bottle, sponge
Paddle and spare paddle (Mitchell Blades Bombora paddle from Expedition Kayaks and spare paddle from Nadgee Kayaks)
Drink bottle
Paddle leash
PLB, knife, whistle
Dry bags to pack clothes, food, first aid and sleeping bag etc.; tapered dry sacks, compression dry sacks and dry sacks – 2, 4 and 8 litres (all from Sea to Summit)
Personal Flotation Device (PFD – life jacket)
Spray skirts (one from Expedition Kayaks and one Solution spray skirt from Sea to Summit)
Sponsons and rear deck bag (picked up at Esperance for crossing of the Bight only)
Desalinator (picked up at Esperance for crossing of the Bight only)
My first day from Broome — 11 April 2010. Day one of my sixteen-month journey kayaking alone around Australia and it was not a great start.
Working out the best place to camp can be tricky business — camping just above high tide on Ninety Mile Beach, 20 April.
The beach south of Spit Point after De Grey River on 26 April. Half the rudder had been bitten off by sharks just before I landed at Eighty Mile Beach.
Twenty-four hours into the 200-kilometre Zuytdorp Cliff crossing on 29 May; first light was a major goal but the time after dawn was hardest.
West Cape Howe, the most southerly point in Western Australia — 26 July.
The camp I shared with the four-wheel-drive fishermen after I’d completed the 160-kilometre Baxter Cliffs crossing on 31 August.
Leaving Eyre Bird Observatory on 4 September; behind me is a wrecked fishing boat.
Off to Eucla, a 270-kilometre paddle away — note the deck bag on the back, 4 September.
A handsome chap, paddling between Eyre Bird Observatory and Eucla on 5 September.
Launching from weed beds in the Bight, 6 September.
Looking worse for wear after finishing the 190-kilometre Bunda Cliffs on 16 September. This shows the edge of the reef I landed on; the Head of the Bight is in the background.
Staging my departure for the ABC film crew on Glenelg Beach, 23 October — with my daughter, Brittany.
NSWSKC members kindly escorting me into Botany Bay, Sydney, on 18 December.