








Woody Classics Weekend – Stillwater Picnic – 26 Classic Wooden Boat Photos









Woody Classics Weekend – Stillwater Picnic – 26 Classic Wooden Boat Photos

A-Class Racing on the Waitemata
Today’s feature photo is from a photo essay that Mike McGehan sent in. If my eyes and memory are correct Left > Right
A15 Prize, A17 Ngatoa, A14 Ngataringa, A18 Tawera, A27 Arohia
Anyone able to put an approx. date on the photo?
Mondays WW story will be a goody – 30+ photos from the camera of Kere Kemp who has just returned from the 2019 Port Townsend Wooden Boat Festival. Great photos from a gent with a good key for woody talent 🙂 A tease below



RSVP – you and your boats name + approx. numbers to sueedwards@xtra.co.nz



McLeod – 36’ Bridgedecker






Des Townson – A Sailing Legacy






Woody Classics Weekend Riverhead Trip Report


And more ex David Plummer and Geoff Steven


B/W photo below ex Mike Mahoney

Great view of Jason Prew’s – My Girl below. taken by Angus Rogers. Really shows off her lines, no wonder she is so quick 😉



SILVER DOLLAR




JUDGES BAY



MISS SANDRA (Kokiri)

DIANA WHITE
Today’s woody story is a tad out there – we have a 38’ ex lifeboat looking for a new home. Well to be honest we are really looking for a woody with a big shed and lots of vision. Owner John Fairburn wrote to me saying he had too many projects on the go and needed to find a new home. I’ll let John tell you in his words:
“Diana White has crossed the Manukau Bar in extreme conditions without a worry and travelled at sea when no-one else was, is now for sale. It had always been a slipway boat until it’s 1st private owner previous to me took it over and the huge anodes that earthed the SSB radio brought on a softening of timber through electrolysis around bronze, stainless and galv steel plus alloy cabin.
A lifeboat has many compartments held together with many bolts and special bronze and galvanised steel framework that had begun to rust in a few spots, so it took a bit to get back to bare hull to work on any soft stuff, and then I was going to use epoxied timber to rebuild. It’s a double ender 37’6″ x 12’0″ x 3’6″ with 2 x 23″ propellers in tunnels and weighed 13 tons.
I was going to re-power and fit twin rudders so sold the 2 D series Fords that returned a litre per nautical mile at sea. At the moment it’s a bare hull so easier to survey (tap hull for soft timber) and is much reduced in weight and therefore easier to transport. I was in process selling props / shafts / stern-tubes / stuffing boxes and couplings, rudder, stainless bow rails and alloy swing down mast with radar reflector and 2 x stainless fuel tanks and the guy across road wants to turn hull into a house/cabin but a local Katikati boat owner reminded me of Waitemata Woodys, so if someone wants to pay me $3000 they can have the lot complete with RNLI drawings (1 inch to the foot) so they can plan their finished project.
I’ve still got a big oak tiller that has bronze end fitting that clicks into bronze shoe for manual steering and a special cutting tool to clear propellers through tunnel access ports.”


