Mystery Launch 16/10 – Doris

Mystery Launch 16/10

photo ex Heather Reeve ex trademe
The description on this post card says “Oldest wooden & stone buildings in NZ. KeriKeri Bay of Islands.”
Who can ID the launch?

Both Baden Pascoe & Harold Kidd have ID’ed her as the Fullers launch ‘Doris’

Lady Gillian

Lady Gillian

After yesterdays visual explosion of boats & related bits, I thought I would give your eyes a rest & put your brains to work i.e. test the research powers of ww out. All I know about Lady Gillian is the she is currently somewhere in the South Island. So folks what do we know about her?

ps people viewed yesterdays post 4,315 times, that is the second highest one day viewing, the highest being my first post on the Whangateau Traditional Boat yard, that tells me ww people share my fondness for what Pam & George are up to in that old red shed 🙂 If you missed it , just scroll down.

 

CYA Launch Group Road Trip

CYA Launch Group Road Trip

While the CYA yachties were having their 1st race of the season on Sunday, the launch group hit the road & headed north to Whangateau for a shed visit to check on the progress of ‘Laughing Lady’ at the Whangateau Traditional Boat yard. Good planning ensured we were there at high-tide, so we got to see all the old girls afloat. Regular readers of ww will have seen photos of the yard from my previous posts but today was special to share Pam & George’s magic space with a bunch of serious wooden boat nuts.

James Dreyer gave a brief talk on the the history of LL & how the restoration was coming along. Probably the best question of the day & best answer was – “Are you taking her back to the USA” – “No, she is here to stay, the Waitemata & greater Hauraki Gulf is her new home”.

Post the shed visit we headed up the hill to Carolyn & Shane Anderson’s (MV Waimiga) stunning property for a a tasting of locals wines & their own estate olive oil. A BBQ followed & then a coastal walk.
There are plans to make this trip a regular on the launch calendar.

A big thank you to Pam & George from Whangateau Traditional Boats + Carolyn & Shane. And James Dreyer for letting us all crawl over Laughing Lady 🙂

Enjoy the photos – click any to enlarge – I took so many, this is just a random selection, I’ll post more over time.

Jack Brooke Cruise Collection #5 – Matanui 1955

Jack Brooke Cruise Collection – Matanui 1955

waitematawoodys would again like to thank Robert Brooke for making the remarkable cruise drawings done by his father, Jack Brooke, available to ww followers. Jack produced a hand drawing on each cruise. Today’s post is the fifth of several – enjoy.

The above drawing records the travels of Matanui during a ‘boys’ weekend fishing trip in 1955. They departed early Friday evening & returned on Monday morning. A lot of ground was covered with the Needles being the targeted location to the north & Elephant Cove to the east. From the sea state drawing & comments, it must have been a little rough between Elephant Cove & Shag Rock.

The crew was made up of Jack Brooke, Joe Kissin, John Ellis & Scott Wilson. Interestingly the crew did the same trip 11 years later – I will post that drawing next week.

LABOUR WEEKEND Oct 25-28 EVENT

LABOUR WEEKEND Oct 25-28 EVENT

If you are looking for a destination for your Labour weekend cruise – see attached flyer promoting the Kawau Boating Club / Mahurangi Spring Splash weekend at Kawau Island.
ww encourages all boaties to support the weekend. There is a lot of money to be spent on the place but it is unique in the Gulf and is worth saving.
If you can’t attend, consider joining, details on the flyer. The club is really dependent on the boating fraternity joining the club and helping to fund the costs of getting the fuel facility operating again and the clubhouse spruced up for summer.

PS – not sure if you noticed it but there is a significant sign of the changing boating environment on this flyer – what you ask?, the new name for what was the Kawau Yacht Club, now the Kawau Boating Club, next it will be the Royal New Zealand Boat Squardon ……….   🙂

Kawau Yacht Club – memories ex Ken Ricketts

I was a foundation member of the original format of the club from day one, & thought perhaps it may be of interest to some, if I write a little anthology, of my knowledge of the background as I know it, & background the early days preceding the creation of the original club, which has now of course, excitingly, taken “its next step along the way, in to the future.”
Post WWII the wonderfully hospitable Mr & Mrs Roy & Irene Lidgard, who were very good family friends, & were, it seems, friends of the whole boating fraternity, in northern New Zealand,  held fairly comparatively impromptu, New Years day gatherings, on their front lawn, of their newly built beautiful, waters edge, Smeltinghouse Bay home, where there was a day filled with dingy races, swimming races, & sailing races, to which most of us, who were at Kawau on that day, attended, with many hundreds, lining their property front lawn, & shoreline. This was followed by a dance & social, in their boatbuilding shed, along the other end of the bay, in the evening. Always a hugely successful & popular event, which I attended every time, from Christmas 1946. The popularity of this was such, that it prompted the wonderful donation, by Mrs Irene Lidgard, of the land, to make the club & club house possible. I think the  Lidgard family, also donated much of the materials for the building.
The actual building was created substantially by donations of labour, some materials,  & time by a good number of boaties and residents of the day, & was erected, in the circumstances, surprisingly quickly.
Initially, its interior was open all the way to the slope of roof line, & was completed, from memory, circa 1949-50. Some years later the ceiling was lowered & made flush.
It was erected before mains supply power came to the lsland, in the early days, power was courtesy of a 1 cyl Lister Diesel, driving a 32 volt DC generator, in a shed a wee way up the bank at  the rear of Lidgard’s house, connected to 3 or 4 x 32 volt light bulbs, hanging from the roof.
Power came to the island in the1950s, – (c1954-56 as I recall), after which the club blossomed, from a  services point of view, with a shower & toilet facility being built, for the benefit of all of us, refrigeration, & sale of foodstuffs being important additional facilities & services, the club provided.
Through the years there have been some wonderful dedicated people running it all as club captain, & one family whom I knew well, who was there for many years, from the 1950s was the Schumachers, of what I have always called Commettee’s Bay, (after Frank Commettee, a business friend of my fathers who had a lovely home in that bay) — next door to Smeltinghouse, who were instrumental to quite a degree, in the evolution of improvements in various areas.
The Lidgards had an association with BP in Auckland, & perhaps with their input, the club acquired its petrol & diesel facility in the later 50s 60s era.
For many years after completion of the clubhouse, every New Years Day, there was, for many, “the ultimate regatta of the year,” with competitions from the very young boys & girls, to extremely mature, both ladies & gentlemen, with ladies & gents racing & completion for many water associated sports, including dinghy rowing, one oared sculling,– from the bow & the stern, which caused many hilarious collisions & sinkings, —  swimming, yacht racing , launch racing, etc., etc. & a great prizegiving  evening of festivity to following on, on New  Years night in the clubhouse with local musicians,  boaties & island residents   providing a big diversity of sound & hilarity. I have considerable 8mm colour movie footage, (now on DVD), of these events & will try & scan some still shots off this.
These wonderful events were attended by many hundreds or perhaps even in to the thousands for the regattas, & went on every New Year Day & night, well in to the 1980s, until eventually, sadly, as a result of a small number of troublemakers, it was reluctantly decided to pull the plug in these wonderful dance social evenings. — A typical example of the majority having it ruined by the few.
As many of us are aware there have been mergers, & financial support from other boating organisations leading eventually, to the great news of this week, that it is continuing to have a future for as all,  but at the end of the day, the  building. its history, & the concept & the club have endured. — Long, long, may it continue –

Dawn

DAWN
photo ex Steve Forsman

Yesterday on ww there was some chat in the comments section about the launch Dawn. Steve Forsman commented on an existing ww post that his grandfather c.1960 had owned a small, approx. 26′, launch named Dawn, that was moored in Tauranga Harbour.

Harold Kidd commented that this was most likely yet another Dawn built by Arch Logan (allegedly) for J C Spedding c.1922 but bought by Dr. Stenhouse for game fishing at Mayor Island in 1932. She was a fast boat with a 40hp Scripps.

Steve sent me the photo above last night & speaking with Harold he commented that the reference to Arch Logan building her is from a 1932 Auckland Star piece when Spedding sold her to Dr. Stenhouse of Katikati. Bill Couldrey fitted her out for game-fishing (obviously recommended by Arch) and his uncle(?) Capt. Couldrey delivered her to Tauranga for Stenhouse.

Harold feels it’s equally likely that she was built by Logan Bros under a different name but without any photo reference has been unable to ‘squirrel’ out the detail as yet. He said that you can see a resemblance to Coquette/Logan 33 if you squint a bit. One fact nags Harold – the fact she had a Scripps engine in 1932 because Lanes were Scripps agents.
To quote Harold “too many DAWNs!”

Steve would love to hear what happened to his grandfathers boat, so if anyone can add to the above – please do.

So Much For Spring

A woody reports in from Italy

Well so much for spring – here in Auckland its just foul today so I thought I’d brighten things up a little with a report from ww follower Bruce Rowe. Bruce owns the classic bridge decker – Ngarimu, photo here https://waitematawoodys.com/2013/09/06/the-tale-of-two-ngarimus/
Bruce is currently holidaying in Italy enjoying some time on the Amalfi Coast which has a very old rich history of boating. The photos were taken while in Procida, an island in the Bay of Naples. A quaint little place and as you can see still a little fishing village. Bruce says he & Lyn spent days just wandering around the foreshore & sitting in cafes checking out the many different and interesting boats and the on the water boating activity. The rich had their launches (yachts) outside the breakwater but lunchtime saw flash tenders come in, throw a line to a waiter, then swagger up to a dining table. Of course dressed for the occasion.
Some of these boats were glass hulls but mainly wood. They had beautiful trim finished in wood and all typically followed a similar design.

Serene

SERENE

photos & details ex Ken Ricketts, edited by Alan H

Serene was built by Roy Parris in the late 1950’s early 1960’s. She is approx. 36′ long & powered by a 6-354 Perkins diesel. She has had the same owners, Helen & Craig Brown of Whangarei for over 20 years & is kept at Opua & before that in front of their waterfront home in Whangarei.
The Browns bought her approx. 20years ago off an Italian living at Snells Beach who only owned her for 3 or 4 months & he had bought her of Garry Nordstrand who had owned her for a long time. To the best of the Browns knowledge Serene is the boats original name & she has spent all or almost all of her life in Northland from Algies Bay upwards. Her coamings were varnished until fairly recently as the surface had deteriorated so much they reluctantly made the hard call to paint them, with a thin new layer of timber like a veneer, beneath the new paint to improve the surface.

1934 Miller & Tunnage

1934 Miller  & Tunnage

This 1934 work-boat conversion appeals to me. She is a big old girl 55’8” x 13’5” x 5’ 10” – built in heart kauri & powered by a Gardner 6L3 115hp diesel.

For sale on trademe she recently had an extensive refit. The owner is reluctantly retiring from the sea. would make a nice live aboard.

Anyone able to ID her? Currently in Picton so maybe one of the southern woodys?

More details here https://waitematawoodys.com/2013/05/28/wairangi/

Info ex Paul Drake
Below is the ad for WAIRANGI when she was put up for tender by the Lyttelton Port Company (in the 1980’s?).

Photos ex Frank Stoks of Wairangi taken today (01/10/2014)

Boat on the Move – Kiwa


KIWA
photo & ‘heads up’ from Russell Ward

The classic (workboat) Kiwa is on the move – spotted last week on-route from the Hokianga to Auckland – so the questions are :-
1. Who has bought her ?
2. Where in Auckland is off to ?

Russell took the fogbound photo (below) of her on her ex home waters on the Hokianga in 2006
Paul Gilbert alerted Russell to the post on The Shipping Office website.

Russell’s message to the new owner is  “Look after her, mate. I’ve long admired her”.

Can anyone supply some more details on her builder & past life – Russell?

kiwafogsmall