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Todays story comes to us via Ken Ricketts, with details and photos begged/borrowed/ uplifted by KR from the following sources – fb/google/Lew Redwood/Ken Brown/Daniel Michaels and KR himself.
The ship Q406, is probably the last Fairmile left in NZ. She was used during WW2, as a N.Z. coastal patrol boat, and later in the Solomons. Once she and the other Fairmiles returned back to Auckland in 1945, they were decommissioned.
Q406 was offered up for sale via tender and purchased by Rodney Farry, who fitted 2 x Graymarine marinised GM Detroit 6-71 diesel engines, and converted her into a passenger ship. In this configuration she operated around the Otago Harbour, until she ran aground on a sandbar, causing Farry to lose interest in the concept.
She was renamed NEW VENTURE in 1949 and sailed back to Auckland, under command of a temporary crew. While sailing back, she struck a violent storm off the Castlecliff Coast, with the inexperienced sailors clinging near the coast.
In 1950, she was sold to Waiheke Shipping Co. and had her name changed to MOTUNUI and was used as a passenger ferry, transporting people to and from Auckland to Waiheke, Great Barrier & Motuihe Islands.
When Waiheke Shipping was sold to North Shore Ferries. MOTUNUI would continue operating under them until 1984, when she was sold into private ownership.
Over the next 20 years she would switch ownership multiple times, one of these being to the late Ken Brown, an old friend of Ken Rs, who converted her to pleasure craft use, in the 1980s. She was kept at the bottom of his garden, on the water’s edge, in the Tamaki River.
There were plans in 1997 to have her brought to survey standards in time to be used as a sightseeing boat for the America’s Cup.
This was abandoned when relations between the joint owners, (& several suppliers) soured. Even though much work was done by then (including fitting an original wheelhouse taken from Fairmile Kahu).
She was sold again in 2001 and 2006, when she took one final voyage to Tauranga, so her machinery could be removed, along with her superstructure.
Her final owner was Barry Woods, who operated Woodlyn Park Motel, at Waitomo. MOTUNUI was hauled onto land, and converted into a motel, now advertised as the ‘WAITANIC’. A sad ending but better than a date with a backhoe and box of matches and she has some funky neibours for company – a Bristol Frighter and railway car, refer below 🙂 . (edited by Alan H)


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Motunui’s upgrade from warship to ferry was quite extensive (and aesthetic). Her wheelhouse had the helm behind the skipper (slightly unusual) and the original deckhouse appeared sunken into the hull but still identifiable (a lot lower) behind the wheelhouse. I have one of the weekly Star waterfront write-ups (Kirk’s) of the day in my scrap book from 1960 and it says (from memory) that the hull was raised several feet above the original deckline which would account for the original deckhouse appearing sunken into the hull. The funnel was in its original position but raised.
But when you compare the photos, the arrangement of the scuttles (ok ok portholes) they seem the same. I’ll dig the scrapbook out of the boxes of books in the mancave and scan it for yous. That should settle it. I suppose we wanted to settle this.
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I’m told that recently, KAHU, the only one I knew of still alive, (ex, moored by Auckland Upper Harbour Bridge for many years), had to be in burnt Whangarei, as her hull was too rotten to retrieve. KEN R
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She was built by a group called Associated Boat Builders, which was actually Lidgards, (Roy Lidgard), with various well known top end outstanding boatbuilders of the day, joining Roy L. & his team, for the war effort. KEN R
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There is/was another still afloat in Whangarei off Port road
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