SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 90
Downloaden Sie, um offline zu lesen
Rick’s Pictures
I left my house early Thursday morning. After four
    uneventful flights to Atlanta and San Francisco and
     then to Sydney and Brisbane, I crashed at my hotel
   Sunday afternoon. All my connections were on time
  and my luggage made it with me the whole way. The
         only problem was that Qantas had not given me
sufficient time in Sydney to make it through Australian
         Immigration and Customs and to transfer to my
    Brisbane flight. But there is a flight from Sydney to
      Brisbane every hour, so I was only slightly delayed.
I visited Lone Pine Koala sanctuary, which is only about
    12 kilometers from downtown Brisbane. After a nice
 walk to the downtown pier where I met a boat, I left on
  a cruise up the Brisbane River. Aboard the boat I was
 befriended by a Kiwi (New Zealander) named Jeff. Jeff
was a helicopter pilot who had retired to a farm. When
    we got to the Koala sanctuary we headed for the area
       where you could have your picture taken holding a
       koala for $15 Australian. We took turns taking one
                                        another’s photos.
Jeff and I took one another’s pictures holding Koalas.
The Lone Pine Koala sanctuary is the
largest Koala sanctuary in the world,
and is home to more than 130 koalas,
               many of them rescues.
Koalas eat only certain kinds of
   eucalyptus leaves, and don’t get
much energy from their food. They
 spend most of their days sleeping
                       and resting.
Koalas are not the only attraction
   at Lone Pine Koala sanctuary.

    There is also a large pen with
 dozens of kangaroos that can be
  fed by hand. Here is a teenage
  South African girl feeding one.
I didn’t like kneeling on the
ground the way she did. Too
        much kangaroo poop
                  everywhere.
One let Jeff scratch his ears like
                           a dog.
One had a pretty big Joey in her
                         pouch.
There were also birds. This is a
kind of eagle. Can’t remember
the name, but it resembles the
       American golden eagle.
A whitle-bellied eagle.
And a real, sho-nuff
       kookaburra.!
Various tropical birds, too.
And wombats, which are
reputedly pretty vicious.
I thought they looked like a
cross between a wild boar and a
                     small bear.
On Tuesday, I flew to Honiara, on the island
  of Guadalcanal, and capital of the Solomon
  Islands. I had sent my Dad’s ashes ahead to
     Marie-Claire and Tony Saunders, who are
shipping agents in Honiara. They met me at
 the airport, and they took me to a yacht club
     where I met Neil Yates, who would be my
                    host for the next two days.
Neil is an Aussie who had a successful
 career as a mechanical engineer in the
    aerospace industry. One day about
 seven years ago he decided he had had
enough of the rat race and so he bought
     a dive shop on the island of Tulagi.
He brought me over to Tulagi, 22
    nautical miles, in a small craft
   maybe 7 or 8 meters long. The
seas were rough; lots of one to two
 meter swells. I caught a lot of salt
   spray in the face. It was quite a
                               ride.
We crossed the “Iron Bottom Sound,” so
  named because of the literally hundreds of
World War II ship wrecks and aircraft wrecks
 that litter the sea bed between Guadalcanal
                                  and Tulagi.
Tulagi turned out to be a charming
place. The hotel was tiny, but I was
well cared for by the staff, who were
   friendly and called me by name.
   The bill they gave me on the last
   day was politely and charmingly
           addressed to, “Mr. Ricky.”
The main language spoken
   throughout the Solomons is a
pidgin English. Here is a get out
the vote poster. Can you read it?
         Hint: just say the words
    phonetically the way they are
                          spelled.
On Wednesday, Neil took me on a
private boat tour of various World War
  II battle sites. We saw Blue Beach, on
the island of Tulagi, which was the first
     site that Allied and Japanese troops
    encountered one another in ground
                                 warfare.
An American from the First Marines
was the first killed in action. We more
          than made up for it, however.
Guadalcanal and Tulagi, which are part
  of the Solomon chain, were the first
 places that the Japanese were actually
 pushed back. They became a staging
     area for the WWII island hopping
                               campaign.
Today Tulagi is a sleepy backwater
island, but in World War II, it was
             hopping with activity.
My Dad served aboard LST 1053 during
   World War II. It participated in the island
  hopping campaign and spent a fair amount
   of time in the Solomon Islands. LSTs were
“Landing Ship Tanks.” They carried payloads
   of equipment and infantry. The ships had
 big doors in the bow and would run up close
       to the beach, open the doors, and their
                      payloads would rush off.
LST 342 was one of the first to arrive in the
           Solomons. On 18 July 1943 she was
  transiting from Guadalcanal to the Russell
       Islands, about 30 or 40 miles , and was
    torpedoed by a Japanese submarine. The
torpedo hit the LST amidships, splitting it in
 half. The stern immediately sunk. The bow
                                 stayed afloat.
When she departed Guadalcanal, LST 342
was carrying 282 personnel, 86 crew and 196
    passengers, mostly soldiers from the U.S.
  Army. 5 crew members and 152 passengers
survived the attack. The crew members who
  survived were those who had been topside.
     The passenger quarters were in the bow,
which stayed afloat, the crew quarters in the
      stern, which sunk almost immediately.
The remaining half of the LST was towed
   back to Tulagi, where it was made into a
Fleet Post Office. This is where all ships in
 the Solomons received their mail. I know
Dad visited this post office, because he was
  the mail officer on his LST, and they were
definitely in the Solomons. In fact, he told
me it was the bioluminescent organisms he
    saw in the water after retrieving mail in
       Tulagi that made him want his ashes
               scattered in the waters there.
The remains of LST 342 are no longer in the
    same place as when she was a Fleet Post
Office, but she has been towed to a spot not
                 far away and she still exists.
But the real reason I had come
was to give a final resting place
        to my father’s remains.
On Wednesday 27 August, after it grew dark,
   Neil and I went out in his boat hoping to
  scare up some bioluminescent organisms.
We were not disappointed. Neil stopped the
  boat, I said a short prayer, and we laid my
                        Dad’s remains to rest.
Latitude S 9 degrees, 6 minutes,
                    57.1 seconds

     Longitude E 160 degrees, 9
         minutes, 50.0 seconds
Rick's Koala and WWII Photos

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Was ist angesagt?

Van Tour 81 Florida 2001
Van Tour 81 Florida 2001Van Tour 81 Florida 2001
Van Tour 81 Florida 2001How Gregg
 
REGION XII (SOCCSKSARGEN) Literature
REGION XII (SOCCSKSARGEN) LiteratureREGION XII (SOCCSKSARGEN) Literature
REGION XII (SOCCSKSARGEN) LiteratureRhody Agtoto
 
The Perfect Storm
The Perfect StormThe Perfect Storm
The Perfect Stormfeguedes
 
Kawelo (Ch 2)
Kawelo (Ch 2)Kawelo (Ch 2)
Kawelo (Ch 2)malama777
 
Treasure island
Treasure islandTreasure island
Treasure islandAndreabm98
 
Kochin one day destination
Kochin one day destinationKochin one day destination
Kochin one day destinationnithindas m
 
Pacific Islands History
Pacific Islands HistoryPacific Islands History
Pacific Islands HistoryBob Marcus
 

Was ist angesagt? (10)

Van Tour 81 Florida 2001
Van Tour 81 Florida 2001Van Tour 81 Florida 2001
Van Tour 81 Florida 2001
 
REGION XII (SOCCSKSARGEN) Literature
REGION XII (SOCCSKSARGEN) LiteratureREGION XII (SOCCSKSARGEN) Literature
REGION XII (SOCCSKSARGEN) Literature
 
The Perfect Storm
The Perfect StormThe Perfect Storm
The Perfect Storm
 
Kawelo (Ch 2)
Kawelo (Ch 2)Kawelo (Ch 2)
Kawelo (Ch 2)
 
Davao
DavaoDavao
Davao
 
Treasure island
Treasure islandTreasure island
Treasure island
 
Kochin one day destination
Kochin one day destinationKochin one day destination
Kochin one day destination
 
Pacific Islands History
Pacific Islands HistoryPacific Islands History
Pacific Islands History
 
Ireland
IrelandIreland
Ireland
 
For The Love Of Nature
For The Love Of NatureFor The Love Of Nature
For The Love Of Nature
 

Ähnlich wie Rick's Koala and WWII Photos

GL47 Get Local FIN LR
GL47 Get Local FIN LRGL47 Get Local FIN LR
GL47 Get Local FIN LRLynn Gail
 
My+name+is+davy+lowston sj+l2,+may+2016 (1)
My+name+is+davy+lowston sj+l2,+may+2016 (1)My+name+is+davy+lowston sj+l2,+may+2016 (1)
My+name+is+davy+lowston sj+l2,+may+2016 (1)Takahe One
 
We're not Afraid to Die If We Can All be Together.pptx
We're not Afraid to Die If We Can All be Together.pptxWe're not Afraid to Die If We Can All be Together.pptx
We're not Afraid to Die If We Can All be Together.pptxMousmi Majumdar
 
Kaitoke School Museum
Kaitoke School MuseumKaitoke School Museum
Kaitoke School MuseumSue West
 
Aussie adventures
Aussie adventuresAussie adventures
Aussie adventurescarriene
 
100 20 000 leagues under the sea.pdf
100 20 000 leagues under the sea.pdf100 20 000 leagues under the sea.pdf
100 20 000 leagues under the sea.pdfSatuchiOtoko
 
We're not afraid to die if we can all be together
We're not afraid to die if we can all be togetherWe're not afraid to die if we can all be together
We're not afraid to die if we can all be togetherMRINAL GHOSH
 
Exploring the historical 1,000 Islands Parkway to the Ivy Lea International C...
Exploring the historical 1,000 Islands Parkway to the Ivy Lea International C...Exploring the historical 1,000 Islands Parkway to the Ivy Lea International C...
Exploring the historical 1,000 Islands Parkway to the Ivy Lea International C...Fergus Ducharme
 
Charming Nunavut Article Midwest Outdoors
Charming Nunavut Article Midwest OutdoorsCharming Nunavut Article Midwest Outdoors
Charming Nunavut Article Midwest OutdoorsEppingerMfgCo
 
Malta Siege World War 2 - 1941 to 1944
Malta Siege World War 2 - 1941 to 1944Malta Siege World War 2 - 1941 to 1944
Malta Siege World War 2 - 1941 to 1944SusanMiller209
 
Mysterious Alaska, Large Aquatic Monsters, Mammoths and Deceptive Paranormal ...
Mysterious Alaska, Large Aquatic Monsters, Mammoths and Deceptive Paranormal ...Mysterious Alaska, Large Aquatic Monsters, Mammoths and Deceptive Paranormal ...
Mysterious Alaska, Large Aquatic Monsters, Mammoths and Deceptive Paranormal ...Charlie
 
Our trip in Iceland
Our trip in IcelandOur trip in Iceland
Our trip in Icelandingaloa86
 
Traveltravel
TraveltravelTraveltravel
Traveltravelingaloa86
 
The Perfect Storm
The Perfect StormThe Perfect Storm
The Perfect StormRicardo07
 
Coney Island Slide Show
Coney Island Slide ShowConey Island Slide Show
Coney Island Slide ShowDeevaStarR99
 

Ähnlich wie Rick's Koala and WWII Photos (20)

GL47 Get Local FIN LR
GL47 Get Local FIN LRGL47 Get Local FIN LR
GL47 Get Local FIN LR
 
My+name+is+davy+lowston sj+l2,+may+2016 (1)
My+name+is+davy+lowston sj+l2,+may+2016 (1)My+name+is+davy+lowston sj+l2,+may+2016 (1)
My+name+is+davy+lowston sj+l2,+may+2016 (1)
 
We're not Afraid to Die If We Can All be Together.pptx
We're not Afraid to Die If We Can All be Together.pptxWe're not Afraid to Die If We Can All be Together.pptx
We're not Afraid to Die If We Can All be Together.pptx
 
907475artbooktest
907475artbooktest907475artbooktest
907475artbooktest
 
Kaitoke School Museum
Kaitoke School MuseumKaitoke School Museum
Kaitoke School Museum
 
Aussie adventures
Aussie adventuresAussie adventures
Aussie adventures
 
100 20 000 leagues under the sea.pdf
100 20 000 leagues under the sea.pdf100 20 000 leagues under the sea.pdf
100 20 000 leagues under the sea.pdf
 
New Zealand
New ZealandNew Zealand
New Zealand
 
Adv LA Island Article
Adv LA Island ArticleAdv LA Island Article
Adv LA Island Article
 
20,000 leaguesunderthesea
20,000 leaguesunderthesea20,000 leaguesunderthesea
20,000 leaguesunderthesea
 
26 Travel
26 Travel26 Travel
26 Travel
 
We're not afraid to die if we can all be together
We're not afraid to die if we can all be togetherWe're not afraid to die if we can all be together
We're not afraid to die if we can all be together
 
Exploring the historical 1,000 Islands Parkway to the Ivy Lea International C...
Exploring the historical 1,000 Islands Parkway to the Ivy Lea International C...Exploring the historical 1,000 Islands Parkway to the Ivy Lea International C...
Exploring the historical 1,000 Islands Parkway to the Ivy Lea International C...
 
Charming Nunavut Article Midwest Outdoors
Charming Nunavut Article Midwest OutdoorsCharming Nunavut Article Midwest Outdoors
Charming Nunavut Article Midwest Outdoors
 
Malta Siege World War 2 - 1941 to 1944
Malta Siege World War 2 - 1941 to 1944Malta Siege World War 2 - 1941 to 1944
Malta Siege World War 2 - 1941 to 1944
 
Mysterious Alaska, Large Aquatic Monsters, Mammoths and Deceptive Paranormal ...
Mysterious Alaska, Large Aquatic Monsters, Mammoths and Deceptive Paranormal ...Mysterious Alaska, Large Aquatic Monsters, Mammoths and Deceptive Paranormal ...
Mysterious Alaska, Large Aquatic Monsters, Mammoths and Deceptive Paranormal ...
 
Our trip in Iceland
Our trip in IcelandOur trip in Iceland
Our trip in Iceland
 
Traveltravel
TraveltravelTraveltravel
Traveltravel
 
The Perfect Storm
The Perfect StormThe Perfect Storm
The Perfect Storm
 
Coney Island Slide Show
Coney Island Slide ShowConey Island Slide Show
Coney Island Slide Show
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen

16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
 
57 Bidens Annihilation Nation Policy.pdf
57 Bidens Annihilation Nation Policy.pdf57 Bidens Annihilation Nation Policy.pdf
57 Bidens Annihilation Nation Policy.pdfGerald Furnkranz
 
Political-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptx
Political-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptxPolitical-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptx
Political-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptxSasikiranMarri
 
Global Terrorism and its types and prevention ppt.
Global Terrorism and its types and prevention ppt.Global Terrorism and its types and prevention ppt.
Global Terrorism and its types and prevention ppt.NaveedKhaskheli1
 
15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
 
Foreign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptx
Foreign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptxForeign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptx
Foreign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptxunark75
 
IndiaWest: Your Trusted Source for Today's Global News
IndiaWest: Your Trusted Source for Today's Global NewsIndiaWest: Your Trusted Source for Today's Global News
IndiaWest: Your Trusted Source for Today's Global NewsIndiaWest2
 
Rohan Jaitley: Central Gov't Standing Counsel for Justice
Rohan Jaitley: Central Gov't Standing Counsel for JusticeRohan Jaitley: Central Gov't Standing Counsel for Justice
Rohan Jaitley: Central Gov't Standing Counsel for JusticeAbdulGhani778830
 
Geostrategic significance of South Asian countries.ppt
Geostrategic significance of South Asian countries.pptGeostrategic significance of South Asian countries.ppt
Geostrategic significance of South Asian countries.pptUsmanKaran
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen (9)

16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
16042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
57 Bidens Annihilation Nation Policy.pdf
57 Bidens Annihilation Nation Policy.pdf57 Bidens Annihilation Nation Policy.pdf
57 Bidens Annihilation Nation Policy.pdf
 
Political-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptx
Political-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptxPolitical-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptx
Political-Ideologies-and-The-Movements.pptx
 
Global Terrorism and its types and prevention ppt.
Global Terrorism and its types and prevention ppt.Global Terrorism and its types and prevention ppt.
Global Terrorism and its types and prevention ppt.
 
15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
15042024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdf
 
Foreign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptx
Foreign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptxForeign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptx
Foreign Relation of Pakistan with Neighboring Countries.pptx
 
IndiaWest: Your Trusted Source for Today's Global News
IndiaWest: Your Trusted Source for Today's Global NewsIndiaWest: Your Trusted Source for Today's Global News
IndiaWest: Your Trusted Source for Today's Global News
 
Rohan Jaitley: Central Gov't Standing Counsel for Justice
Rohan Jaitley: Central Gov't Standing Counsel for JusticeRohan Jaitley: Central Gov't Standing Counsel for Justice
Rohan Jaitley: Central Gov't Standing Counsel for Justice
 
Geostrategic significance of South Asian countries.ppt
Geostrategic significance of South Asian countries.pptGeostrategic significance of South Asian countries.ppt
Geostrategic significance of South Asian countries.ppt
 

Rick's Koala and WWII Photos

  • 2. I left my house early Thursday morning. After four uneventful flights to Atlanta and San Francisco and then to Sydney and Brisbane, I crashed at my hotel Sunday afternoon. All my connections were on time and my luggage made it with me the whole way. The only problem was that Qantas had not given me sufficient time in Sydney to make it through Australian Immigration and Customs and to transfer to my Brisbane flight. But there is a flight from Sydney to Brisbane every hour, so I was only slightly delayed.
  • 3. I visited Lone Pine Koala sanctuary, which is only about 12 kilometers from downtown Brisbane. After a nice walk to the downtown pier where I met a boat, I left on a cruise up the Brisbane River. Aboard the boat I was befriended by a Kiwi (New Zealander) named Jeff. Jeff was a helicopter pilot who had retired to a farm. When we got to the Koala sanctuary we headed for the area where you could have your picture taken holding a koala for $15 Australian. We took turns taking one another’s photos.
  • 4.
  • 5. Jeff and I took one another’s pictures holding Koalas.
  • 6.
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • 9.
  • 10.
  • 11.
  • 12. The Lone Pine Koala sanctuary is the largest Koala sanctuary in the world, and is home to more than 130 koalas, many of them rescues.
  • 13.
  • 14. Koalas eat only certain kinds of eucalyptus leaves, and don’t get much energy from their food. They spend most of their days sleeping and resting.
  • 15.
  • 16.
  • 17.
  • 18. Koalas are not the only attraction at Lone Pine Koala sanctuary. There is also a large pen with dozens of kangaroos that can be fed by hand. Here is a teenage South African girl feeding one.
  • 19.
  • 20.
  • 21. I didn’t like kneeling on the ground the way she did. Too much kangaroo poop everywhere.
  • 22.
  • 23.
  • 24.
  • 25.
  • 26. One let Jeff scratch his ears like a dog.
  • 27.
  • 28. One had a pretty big Joey in her pouch.
  • 29.
  • 30.
  • 31. There were also birds. This is a kind of eagle. Can’t remember the name, but it resembles the American golden eagle.
  • 32.
  • 33.
  • 35.
  • 36.
  • 37. And a real, sho-nuff kookaburra.!
  • 38.
  • 39.
  • 41.
  • 42. And wombats, which are reputedly pretty vicious.
  • 43.
  • 44. I thought they looked like a cross between a wild boar and a small bear.
  • 45.
  • 46.
  • 47. On Tuesday, I flew to Honiara, on the island of Guadalcanal, and capital of the Solomon Islands. I had sent my Dad’s ashes ahead to Marie-Claire and Tony Saunders, who are shipping agents in Honiara. They met me at the airport, and they took me to a yacht club where I met Neil Yates, who would be my host for the next two days.
  • 48.
  • 49. Neil is an Aussie who had a successful career as a mechanical engineer in the aerospace industry. One day about seven years ago he decided he had had enough of the rat race and so he bought a dive shop on the island of Tulagi.
  • 50. He brought me over to Tulagi, 22 nautical miles, in a small craft maybe 7 or 8 meters long. The seas were rough; lots of one to two meter swells. I caught a lot of salt spray in the face. It was quite a ride.
  • 51.
  • 52.
  • 53. We crossed the “Iron Bottom Sound,” so named because of the literally hundreds of World War II ship wrecks and aircraft wrecks that litter the sea bed between Guadalcanal and Tulagi.
  • 54. Tulagi turned out to be a charming place. The hotel was tiny, but I was well cared for by the staff, who were friendly and called me by name. The bill they gave me on the last day was politely and charmingly addressed to, “Mr. Ricky.”
  • 55.
  • 56.
  • 57.
  • 58.
  • 59.
  • 60.
  • 61.
  • 62.
  • 63.
  • 64.
  • 65.
  • 66.
  • 67.
  • 68. The main language spoken throughout the Solomons is a pidgin English. Here is a get out the vote poster. Can you read it? Hint: just say the words phonetically the way they are spelled.
  • 69.
  • 70. On Wednesday, Neil took me on a private boat tour of various World War II battle sites. We saw Blue Beach, on the island of Tulagi, which was the first site that Allied and Japanese troops encountered one another in ground warfare.
  • 71. An American from the First Marines was the first killed in action. We more than made up for it, however. Guadalcanal and Tulagi, which are part of the Solomon chain, were the first places that the Japanese were actually pushed back. They became a staging area for the WWII island hopping campaign.
  • 72. Today Tulagi is a sleepy backwater island, but in World War II, it was hopping with activity.
  • 73. My Dad served aboard LST 1053 during World War II. It participated in the island hopping campaign and spent a fair amount of time in the Solomon Islands. LSTs were “Landing Ship Tanks.” They carried payloads of equipment and infantry. The ships had big doors in the bow and would run up close to the beach, open the doors, and their payloads would rush off.
  • 74. LST 342 was one of the first to arrive in the Solomons. On 18 July 1943 she was transiting from Guadalcanal to the Russell Islands, about 30 or 40 miles , and was torpedoed by a Japanese submarine. The torpedo hit the LST amidships, splitting it in half. The stern immediately sunk. The bow stayed afloat.
  • 75.
  • 76. When she departed Guadalcanal, LST 342 was carrying 282 personnel, 86 crew and 196 passengers, mostly soldiers from the U.S. Army. 5 crew members and 152 passengers survived the attack. The crew members who survived were those who had been topside. The passenger quarters were in the bow, which stayed afloat, the crew quarters in the stern, which sunk almost immediately.
  • 77. The remaining half of the LST was towed back to Tulagi, where it was made into a Fleet Post Office. This is where all ships in the Solomons received their mail. I know Dad visited this post office, because he was the mail officer on his LST, and they were definitely in the Solomons. In fact, he told me it was the bioluminescent organisms he saw in the water after retrieving mail in Tulagi that made him want his ashes scattered in the waters there.
  • 78. The remains of LST 342 are no longer in the same place as when she was a Fleet Post Office, but she has been towed to a spot not far away and she still exists.
  • 79.
  • 80.
  • 81.
  • 82.
  • 83.
  • 84.
  • 85. But the real reason I had come was to give a final resting place to my father’s remains.
  • 86. On Wednesday 27 August, after it grew dark, Neil and I went out in his boat hoping to scare up some bioluminescent organisms. We were not disappointed. Neil stopped the boat, I said a short prayer, and we laid my Dad’s remains to rest.
  • 87.
  • 88.
  • 89. Latitude S 9 degrees, 6 minutes, 57.1 seconds Longitude E 160 degrees, 9 minutes, 50.0 seconds