


CLASSIC WOODEN EX WORKBOAT – ARIANA / GLENROWAN / TE KAWAU
Earlier in the week WW was contacted by Sven Wiig the owner of the classic wooden ex workboat – ARIANA. ARIANA made an appearance on WW back in Oct 2020 – link here https://waitematawoodys.com/2020/01/10/ariana/
I’ll hand over to Sven to tell the story –
“Today I had a bit of a breakthrough researching my boats history. You may remember I bought ARIANA in about 2020 and have been searching for more information ever since. A while back I discovered that before she was named ARIANA and before GLENROWAN she was named TE KAWAU as shown in the top photo above which I had just discovered.
The other photos are also from the 1950’s. She was then owned by Bill Ryland and fished out of Wanganui. Bill owned her until 1974 when she was sold to the Turner family and moved to Nelson where John Turner ran her. Sometime in the 1980’s she changed hands again and was renamed GLENROWAN then to the John Stewart who had her converted then I bought her.
So I’m hoping someone knows who owned her before Bill? The Turner family knew of the boat in the 1940’s as old man Turner fished on her then, possibly out of Picton. My best guess is that she was built by Lanes of Picton but searching the records does not come up with her name. I have been told that she may have been built in Lyttleton so maybe Millar Bros? She is similar to other boats built by Lanes and Millar and Tunnage so who knows?
ARIANA / TE KAWAU is currently still on the hard where I have been undertaking a major rebuild / restoration of her.”
WW has asked to be kept updated on the project, so fingers crossed for more stories. In the mean time can we learn more about this classic woody.
Check out the size of the snapper on the trailer in the b/w photos
The photos below are from the Oct 2020 WW story.

Discover more from waitematawoodys.com #1 for classic wooden boat stories, info, advice & news - updated daily - 14+ million views
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.





TeKawau was never abandoned on the slip, she was always berthed at the town wharf.
LikeLike
Ok. as an afterthought I was thinking that she worked out of the town wharf along with one other boat whose identity escapes me. There was an abandoned vessel on that slip though.
LikeLike
You are right about the location but the boat wouldn’t have been Te Kawau. She was an active working boat right up until the early 1990’s. Certainly wasn’t sitting abandoned during this time.
LikeLike
The lower photo of TeKawau set my bells ringing. In my boyhood in Wanganui during the 1950s and 60s she was an abandoned fixture on her also abandoned slip a hundred metres or so downstream from the Dublin St bridge.. She never moved. On return visits to Wanganui since the slip has remained abandoned and I always assumed the vessel had been demolished. How nice to find her healthy and loved. Cheers
LikeLike