Lady Adelaide

P1070615 Lady Adelaide

Lady Adelaide

1920’s Dick Lang designed & built. More info would be appreciated.

The original owner Charles Palmer was one of this country’s finest yachtsmen, founding the NZ Power Boat Association in 1905, the Motor Boat Patrol in 1914, the RNZNVR and being an able administrator with the APYMBA and the various yacht clubs until he died.

08-01-2016 photo at Kawau Island ex Tom Kane

Lady Adelaide Kawau2016

How to – hints on removing bottom paint off a wooden hull

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How to - hints on removing bottom paint off a wooden hull

Hints on removing bottom paint off a wooden hull (ex Baden Pascoe – MV John Dory)

The best time to do a major paint job on the bottom of your boat is when you have it out for a major or minor refit. Just wait long enough and the timber will shrink from under the years of paint and become very easy to remove. Leave this job to the very last as the paint also holds a little moisture in the planking while you are doing the endless list of other jobs.

I started off by placing tarps under the boat to catch all the old paint and then three of us used Linbide (spelling?) scrapers. My friend Jim Mateer has put a long pipe handle on his with a plug in the end and as you scrape, most of the paint flakes run down the centre of the handle. Just empty it every 5 min or so. He sometimes attaches a vacuum cleaner via a soft vac tube, I tell ya, it works very well, I think with the three of us it took about 6 hours work.
I took 23 kg off John Dory and I am very proud to say none of it went into the sea, I disposed of it at Trans Pacific for about $50.00. Then I sanded the surface and gave it 3 coats of International Primercon, one very diluted coat so that it went into the timber, one medium dilution and them a fairly non
diluted coat. The bottom looked so smooth, not bad for an old fishing boat!!
Then I gave it two hard anti fouls in blue and covered it with two soft antifouls. So, when I go to repaint, I just scrub or wet sand off until I see the blue paint. That way I hope to never have to do this again.

JD and Jack Taylor

Photo shows  Jack Taylor now 92 (going on 60) & Jim Mateer, in his late 70’s working on John Dory.

Pacific

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Pacific

Pacific

Designed / built by Joe Slattery in 1917. One of the boats on my bucket list, can not visit Gulf Harbour marina without walking past her 🙂
Hopefully the current owner, Grant Burrell, great grandson of her 1st owner will drop in here with some more details.

Great 1930’s movie featuring the launch Waitangi

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Fantastic 1930’s movie footage of the launch Waitangi & another motor boat doing close maneuvers between the rocks east of Hooks Bay. The first 1/4 has some great aerial footage of Waiheke Island back then. The skipper must have known the area like the back of his hand because remember there were no gps or depth sounders in those days. All boats I believe were owned the the Stein family.
Waitangi certainly had a bit of zoom zoom in those days -petrol Kermit engine, replaced c.1955 with a diesel.

The movie is titled ‘Beautiful Waiheke’ & I suspect was a promotional movie for Waiheke Island, Auckland, New Zealand. Filmed c.1930 by Alex Lambourne. Features the classic launch Waitangi. The white dinghy in the rowing sequence is called ‘The Beagle’.
Starring Peter Stein, Dean Ellingham, Alan Lambourne, Joan Woollams, Arthur Nicholson, Cynthia Restall, Shirley Vicary + others

Thanks to Roger Guthrie (brother of CYA member Graham) for forwarding this footage to waitematawoodys.

Waitangi

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Waitangi

c.1953, photos taken from Roger Guthrie’s family launch Caprice, whose forestay is showing in the top photo

Waitangi getting some love in Blanche & Ian Cook’s shed, Sept 2011, the last time I saw her. Alan H

Update 23-12-2019 – Photo below ex Peter Apperley of Waitangi at Westhaven Marina.

Waitangi Launch Dec2019

 

Luana

LUANA

I will start by quoting an anonymous lover of classic wooden boats who said to me once when the subject of Luana came up –  “I think she is my favourite of all the Classics. Believe it or not she is prettier than Lady Margaret, Lady Gay, Wirihana etc. She really is the ultimate in ‘cool’. Its interesting how different boats do it for different people but Luana is one of the rare beauties that is perfect from all angles”. I have been aboard & have to agree.

 
She was built by MT Lane in 1920 in Mechanics Bay & her specs are LOA 47ft, Beam 11ft.6in, Draft 39ins. She has a provenance as long as your arm.
I’m sure her owner will chip in with some tales from her past. One that I do know is that she still holds the record for landing a marlin, shooting a deer & catching a trout – 3hrs 25 minutes
I think I’ll let the photos tell the story.

RAINDANCE > Nona C > Lady Gai

RAINDANCE > Nona C > Lady Gai  

When I purchased the boat she was named ‘Nona C’, after the then owners (Craig Colven, Auckland Harbour Board pilot boat skipper) daughter. He told me the boat was previously named ‘Lady Gay’. I had no connection to the name Nona C & was in the process of reverting back to Lady Gay when I was advised of another launch called Lady Gay, not wanting to confuse things I decided to chose a new name & chose the name ‘RainDance’.

At the time I was unaware of the Celtic spelling of the word Gai & discovered it when given a copy of the Dunsford Marine pre-purchase survey commissioned in March 2003 by a Dr. Rex Ferris. Had I known about the Gai spelling I would have retained the Lady Gai name. I obtained Rex Ferris’s address (East Coast Rd, North Shore, Auckland) from the survey & did a google search which resulted in the Auckland District Health Board employment link & I contacted Rex & Sharon Ferris. Retired, living in Tauranga.

Like myself he knew little about her past, there are still huge gaps e.g. the 1930’s > late 1970’s but below is some history I have gained.

Peter Gill, the motoring journalist, bought the boat in 1987 & at the time had a waterfront property in the Upper Harbour (near Paremoremo wharf) with a mooring put down. He saw the boat advertised in ‘Trader Boat’, she was moored in the Tamaki Estuary & he purchased her for about $7,000. He cannot remember the name of the owner but was told the boat was built by the Lane Motor Boat Company in 1928, there is however some discussion that she may have been built by ‘Collings & Bell’. She had a single cylinder Bukh diesel that was later replaced with an 6 cylinder Ford (he thinks). The owner told Peter that she had been based at Great Barrier Island as a ‘long-liner’ fishing boat for many years prior to him buying her.

When she was moored off Peters house, she took in quite a bit of water, and it was necessary for him to go out as often as twice a week and operate the manual bilge pump. He hired a tradesman who specialized in old boats, and he decided that it was the stern gland that was the problem. He had her hauled out and they filled the stern gland with tallow. It was not a one hundred percent fix & she continued to take on water. Peter was never very comfortable with the boat & to use his words ‘we never went far in her’. She was not a pretty boat in those days with a cabin top that looked like it had been made from a plywood car case, see montage photo above, small because its not pretty 😦

I have spoken to Peter several times but have never unearthed when & to whom he sold her. At some stage, I think post Peter’s ownership, she sank on her mooring in the Upper Harbour & remain submerged for several weeks. Given the swallow tidal nature of the area this had no major negative effect on the boat & some say probably helped in preserving her.

The next chapter is amusing – the mast only of the boat was visible from the Salthouse Boat Builders yard at Greenhite & the tradesman there were running a sweepstake as to how long she would remain submerged before the owner rescued her. During this period two of the Salthouse young boat builders – Blair Cole & Kelly Archer (who both went on to become well respected boat builders in their own right) hatched a plan as to how they could buy the boat. They tracked down the owner & both approached him ‘independently’ with offers for the boat as-is-where-is, one offer being very very low & the other very low, the owner faced with the cost of salvaging the boat accepted the ‘low’ offer. The boys hauled the boat out at Salthouse’s & started a major restoration; Bob Salthouse once told me he remembered the boat & that had to give the young boys a guiding nudge occasionally (thank god!). Half way thru Blair bought Kelly’s share & moved the boat to his property to finish the restoration. Blair & his wife cruised the Gulf extensively in the boat in the 1990’s. I have spoken to Blair & he has no record of who bought (or when) the boat off him. I’m pretty sure it was Rex Ferris in 2003.

In 2005 the boat was for sale on the hard at Bayswater Marina, I looked at her at the time but she would have been too much of a time burden for me at the time. The boat was purchased by Craig Colven who undertook major hull work (replaced some planking, caulking, ribs, floors & keel bolts) & the installation of a new 45hp 4 cylinder motor & replacement of all other machinery, electrics and plumbing. Devonport craftsmen’s Robbie Robertson (deceased) & Charlie Webley undertook the work. Craig, over a 2 year period commissioned this work but never fully completed her as his wife did not share his passion for the sea. I purchased her in mid 2007 for what I considered a bargain given what Craig had spent on her.

I then undertook over the next few years what is called a rolling restoration i.e. I used the boat each summer but hauled her out in winter & continued the project. I retained the services of Milford based wooden boat builder / guru Geoff Bagnall for the big stuff, there were several areas of rot that needed to be removed plus we made her more ‘comfortable’ in terms of helm, hatch layout. I rolled my sleeves up on the rest.

I’m thankful for the care bestowed on the boat over the years – everyone that has rubbed up to her has helped get her thru the last 80+ years.

Like most owners I would love to fill in some of the gaps, so if anyone knows anything about her – please post here or email to

waitematawoodys@gmail.com

Raiona

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RAIONA.
Designed & built by Joe Slattery in 1919 , she was owned by Secombes, accountants, of Remuera, in the later 1940s & 50s, moored at Whakatakataka Bay, & hardly used. — they replaced the original engine, which I think may have been a Lowes Knight, with a Leyland “Comet,” marine diesel, she also had a 4 cyl Graymarine wing motor. Later owned by Bob Cleave.

Photo of Rainoa below taken by Russell Ward 29 December 2013

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23/02/2015 – photos below off Onetangi, New Year 2015, ex Peter Loughlin

 2018 photo below 
Unknown

Endeavour

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EndevourDSCN1419Endeavour

Endeavour – during her Kaipara motor-sailor days – was owned by Jack Matich and used for commercial fishing on the Kaipara. Now back in the hands of her original owners the Beachman family & on the Waitemata Harbour. Photo ex Zach Matich. Newer photo sans sailing rig.