St. Clair

St Clair
photos & details from owner John Newton

The 34′ sedan St Clair was built for Lionel Barney by Brin Wilson in 1956 and is kauri carvel construction. ww readers may recall that it was used as a ferry for St Clair lodge at Vivian Bay on Kawau Island . Piers Barney who runs Norma Jean charters has recollections of collecting passengers from Sandspit when he was 10 years old, Piers had to stand on a soap box to see out of the wheel house.

She was surveyed for 39 passengers to Kawau limits and amazingly carried up to 20  x 44 gallon drums of diesel for generators and bags of wheat and meal for all the chooks and muscovy ducks at the lodge, so a really solid little launch.

Piers father Lionel used to enjoy racing it in fun races against other boats off Kawau Island Yacht Club where she did very well reportedly getting up to 13 knts with a 100hp Ford engine. She hasn’t seen that sort of speed since, perhaps because of the new heavier sedan cabin.

St Clair was bought by John and Helen Hager and refitted to a comfortable sedan in 2006 by Robertsons Boats. Current owners John & Natasha Newton bought her in 2011.

Jack Brooke Cruise Collection #17 – A Late Cruise On Kiariki May 1963

e Walker

Jack Brooke Cruise Collection #17 – A Late Cruise On Kiariki May 1963

Another  Jack Brooke drawing, published on ww thanks to son Robert for making them available to ww followers. Jack produced a hand drawing on each cruise. Today’s post is the 17th featured – this one shows a May 1963 cruise aboard Kiariki to the bottom end of Waiheke Island. It appears a landing at Man-O-War Bay (private prop) did not receive a hospitable greeting.  From the comments – ‘4 rolls in the main’ to the numerous ‘no thanks we don’t want a tow’ it must have been a mixed bag of conditions.

Crew Onboard: John Brooke, Elsie Brooke, Judith Brooke, Errol Slyfield & Bobbie Walker

Johnny Wray Is Calling For Your Help – Ngataki Finalist in Classic Boat Restoration of the Year

Johnny Wray Is Calling For Your Help – Ngataki Finalist in Classic Boat Magazine Restoration of the Year

Good morning folks – I’d like to ask you to spend 2 minutes of your time doing something that could have a big impact on the NZ  marine restoration industry. The legendary classic yacht Ngataki is a finalist (Restoration of the Year – Under 40′) in the prestigious Classic Boat 2015 Awards. Classic Boat Magazine choose their short list (6 only) from around the world & then its up to the classic community to vote on who they think is the winner.

A fact of life is most people are lazy & do not get around to voting – so how about we all rally together & vote for Ngataki. If we win the publicity for the NZ marine trade will be huge.

Other than voting, what more can you do? – on-forwrd the link to this ww page to your friends, family & business associates & ask them to vote.

Ngataki’s category is top of the list so that makes things easy for you & the UK have great privacy laws so unless you tick the ‘Send me stuff’ box they will not make your name or email address available to third parties. BUT you do need to tick the ‘Privacy Policy Acceptance’ box.

CLICK THIS LINK TO VOTE NOW  http://www.classicboat.co.uk/awards2015/

ps the competition is stiff & our girl was designed by Johnny himself so every vote we can get will be needed 🙂

Mosquito Craft Dinghy

Mosquito Craft Dinghy
details ex Geoff Brebner

OK woodys, who has one of these under the house?
Geoff found the old advertisement below & wondered how many of us remember the little 9ft Mosquito Craft moulded ply dinghy popular as a tender from the late ’40’s through to the mid ’60s. Geoff’s late brother-in-law Hector George was sent by his father Geoff to Davison’s in Vancouver to learn the method of of pressure-moulding with veneer and marine glue. This was in about 1948.The same technique was used during WW2 with the Mosquito bomber, hence the name.

The George family started building them at their home at Tamaki Drive Kohimarama before moving to a factory at Ellerslie. The design of the 9 footer was the prize winner of a RNZYS competition for a yacht tender “way back when”. Geoff was led to believe Bill Couldrey was the winning designer, but is prepared to be corrected on that. Incidently, the George and Couldrey families were related by marriage.

The boats were laminated up over a very heavy solid wooden mould out of four layers of 1/16th veneer, with the apron and kelson integral, then put in a large rubber bag which was pulled down to 30 inches of vacuum until the Aerodux glue cured. Seats, gunwhales and tuck were fitted to the finished shell. Later on a 12 ft and a 10’6″ model were also built.They were produced up until 1965 when the cheaper glass-fibre boats found favour.
Geoff can’t recall the figure, but over 900 of the 9 footers were built. Geoff worked there for eleven years & his sister sister’s family still own the first and the last of the 9ft line.
Geoff thinks the 2nd one built was the tender on Harold George’s VICTORY A8.

There must be a few out there tucked away at the back of the shed.

Harold Kidd Input

The Mosquito dinghies were built in quite a different manner from the “cold-moulded” veneer dinghies. As Geoff describes above the Mosquitos were much more elaborately manufactured than the Lidgard type. There were a lot of the latter built. All that was needed was a good sturdy mould, a supply of straight-grained veneer (often pinus radiata), some Aerodux resorcinol raspberry jam adhesive and a staple gun.
Jack Logan produced heaps of them and many backyard builders whacked them out. I used to help my mate Barry Brickell’s father, Maurice, build them at Tui Street Devonport and went on to use the same technology with John Chapple to build several racing 12 footers and that became almost the standard construction technique for one-off and volume centreboarders, especially Des Townson’s famous Zephyrs and Mistrals.
But the Mosquito craft were the pioneers and arguably the best.
The fuselage of the de Havilland Mosquito (DH98) was originally built of a birch/balsa sandwich using CASEIN glue which was all they had when it was designed in 1938. It caused problems in hot humid conditions by unpeeling. However de Havilland developed urea formaldehyde glues, later available commercially as Aerolite, which aced that issue. The Mosquito wasn’t the first plane to use that construction. I used to fly and part-own a de Havilland Moth Minor (DH94) ZK AKM, which was cold-moulded with casein. She’s still flying happily with no fuselage issues after 77 years.

21/02/2015 Photo ex Darren Arthur


Darren commented that the oil on the transom was the result of running a “Seamaster 400”. A rather odd ball outboard that used an air cooled Tecumseh lawnmower engine. Noisy, heavy, smelly and leaky were some of the more polite adjectives Darren recalls his father using to describe it 🙂

24/02/2015 – story & photos from Roger Lacey

My father bought a 12′ Mosquito craft in about 1969. It was a couple of years old and had a 7.5hp Archimedes Electrolux motor that used to eat spark plugs for breakfast. We used it for fishing in the Waitemata and also at Lake Rotoiti where I learned to row. When my parents bought a bach in Turangi we moved the boat down there but not before sanding back the outside and giving it a coat of epoxy resin, which in hindsight probably saved it. The boat caught many times its weight in trout and made both an ideal fly fishing platform and a stealthy trolling vessel over the shallow weed beds near Tokkanu and at the other smaller lakes nearby. The unreliable Electrolux was replaced by an infernal 2.5hp air-cooled Tas outboard which provided just enough power to motor up the lower reaches of the Tongariro River but was useless for trolling so we rowed it most of the time. In the late ’90s my dad sold the boat with the bach without consulting me so I tracked down the new owner and bought it off him, took it home and restored it. As I didn’t have room for yet another boat I ended up selling it to a friend who has it still. He recently found some rot in it, got it professionally repaired and fitted an new foredeck. It is currently awaiting paint.

 

Jack Brooke Cruise Collection #16 – Kiariki Cruise March 1963

Jack Brooke Cruise Collection #16 – Kiariki Cruise March 1963

Another stunning drawing done by Robert Brooke’s father, Jack Brooke, again ww thanks Robert for making them available to ww followers. Jack produced a hand drawing on each cruise. Todays post is the 16th featured – lots of details & side tales in this one.

The above drawing records the travels of Kiariki during their March 1963 cruise to Kawau Island & Gt Barrier Island. There appears to be a lot of ‘reefing’ happening on this cruise so there must have been a good blow.

Crew: John Brooke, R E Hunt, S Hunt, R F Black & E G Bolland

On Waitangi weekend 2015 – Robert Brooke & family (3 generations) took the  15′ clinker runabout ‘Harmony’, that Robert built, down to Lake Rotoiti for the Classic & Wooden Boat Parade. Photo below shows them in Saturdays parade of boats.

Classic Yacht On-Line Magazine Jan/Feb 2015

Classic Yacht On-Line Magazine Jan/Feb 2015

Latest edition of the on-line USA magazine ‘Classic Yacht’ . Remember in the USA yacht = boat so there is lots of motor-boat related stories. Enjoy 🙂

click link to view   http://www.myvirtualpaper.com/doc/ClassicYacht/cym-janfeb2015/2015012001/#0

Auckland Anniversary Day Regatta

Auckland Anniversary Day Regatta

photo ex Heather & John Lidgard

Today is the 175th Auckland Anniversary Day Regatta, for a young country like NZ that is a significant milestone. Out on the water today will be boats of all sizes & ages, from radio controlled pond yachts to the giants of the classic fleet – the A-Class keelers. Now even if you are boat-less today, I encourage you to head down to the harbour & grab a good vantage point.

For classic wooden boat lovers – the key times are:
10.00am for the Tug Boat Race. New inner harbour course this year with the start off Princess Wharf
12.00pm for the A-Class classic fleet start, again off Princes Wharf

Full details on today’s events here  http://www.regatta.org.nz/the spectators

Today’s photo from 1946 shows spectators cramming every vantage point they can at Westhaven. The large concrete building looks a ‘little’ more impressive today as the home of the RNZYS. The large launch on the right was Claude Atherton’s Manuwai.

If you do get out, take the camera & send me some photos 🙂

It would be amiss of me if I did not mention some of the people behind today’s regatta – I’ll upset somebody by saying this (but that’s ok) but without the support & effort of this core group of people from the classic boating movement the regatta just would not happen – (in no order) – Bruce Tantrum, John Street, Baden Pascoe, Joyce Talbot, Eric Mahoney & others I’m sure.

Pacific at the 100th Auckland Anniversary Day Regatta

Pacific at the 100th Auckland Anniversary Day Regatta

photo ex Nathan Herbert

Given that tomorrow is the 175th running of the regatta, I felt it was a perfect opportunity to post the above stunning photo of the launch Pacific & her crew watching the A-Class fleet compete in the regatta.
From L>R – A18 Tawera / A16 Little Jim / A2 Rawhiti / A14 ? / A15 Prize / A5 Rawene / A9 Moana

Tonight there is a big on-the-water fireworks display in the inner harbour so if you are in & around the city – check it out. Details at the regatta website (link below)

I would encourage you tomorrow to make the effort to find a good viewing point as the regatta is one of Auckland’s truly special days.
More details here http://www.regatta.org.nz/

Jack Brooke Cruise Collection #15 – Kiariki Anniversary Day Regatta 1962

Jack Brooke Cruise Collection #15 – Kiariki Anniversary Day Regatta  1962

Another  Jack Brooke drawing, published on ww thanks to son Robert for making them available to ww followers. Jack produced a hand drawing on each cruise. Today’s post is the 15th featured – this one features the 1962 Anniversary Day Regatta & show Kiariki, Kiatoa & Jezebel. I see there is a note that Moana broke her spinnaker boom.

Big crew on-board: John Brooke, Elsie Brooke, Mrs Owen Aisher, Howard Wallace, Monty Wallace, Bill Thompson, Richard Purchase & Mary Duder.

For details on this years regatta – the 175th & only 3 days away – refer here http://www.regatta.org.nz/

Mahurangi Weekend 2015

If you are even remotely interested in classic wooden boats – Mahurangi is where you want to be this coming long weekend 23>26th Jan.

Details below.