SOUNDS RANGER – A FIRST-RATE READ

Oct 2016 – B.O.I.
Feb 2022 – Dargaville
Feb 2022 – Dargaville

SOUNDS RANGER – A FIRST-RATE READ

Back in Oct 2016 Frits Schouten send in a photo of the – SOUNDS RANGER at anchor in the Bay of Islands, over the next few years we uncovered some intel on her history and movements.

An ex owner Tim Whelan advised that she was originally named – ENTERPRIZE but her name was changed to SOUNDS RANGER when she was acquired to ba a ranger boat to serve the lighthouses in the Marlborough Sounds. In Jan 2017 Davey Jones supplied some great intel on her past in the Comments Section, advising that his recollection was that she was built c.1932 by ER Lane, Picton. Link here to that story  https://waitematawoodys.com/2016/10/19/sounds-ranger/

 In March 2021 Penny Krone let us know that the vessel was sighted in Pahi on the northern Kaipara Harbour (west coast of NZ). Then in Feb 2022 Dave Stanaway sent in photos of her hauled out at Dargaville.

Then yesterday WW was contacted by Norm Judd an ex Havelock based ranger. In the WW Comments Section Norma posted the equivalent of ‘War & Peace’ – it was just too long for a comment and to good to be hidden away there. 

So today woodys thanks to Norm we get to get a peek back in time and share some correspondence from the Chief Ranger (Marlborough Sounds Maritime Park) – Kerry Johnson to Norm regarding how to access and start the – SOUNDS RANGER. I have reproduced it in full below as supplied by Norm. Enjoy, I did 🙂

The following description by Kerry Johnson of the “Sounds Ranger.” is from the unpublished NZ NATIONAL PARKS AND RESERVES RANGERS’ ARCHIVE – a collection of written and taped memoirs of Lands and Survey rangers between 1952 and 1987. Kerry was Chief Ranger of the Marlborough Sounds Maritime Park from the 1968 to the 80s.

“Reading my note to Norm Judd, Havelock based ranger, re starting the Sounds Ranger brought back memories about those early days when I took over, among other things, the care and operation of the vessel. I wasn’t impressed with its overall condition. There was need to bring the launch up to Marine Department standards as soon as possible.
The problems included batteries not set up properly to provide backup if one set went flat, the stern tube the tail shaft went through contained a heavy oil for lubrication but would not function properly and no matter how much advice and effort I could muster this thick oil would ooze into the bilge. A few months down the track while cleaning the accumulation of grime from a circulating pump it literally fell apart. Thank goodness the boat was safely in her berth in Picton then!
Many improvements were eventually made but there was one incident that occurred one night when I think I was away. Late one rough, wet evening my wife received a call from the Harbour Board patrol to say the Sounds Ranger’s engine was chugging away in her berth with no sign of anyone on board and the doors securely locked! Now there has to be a logical explanation as to how this happened but I was never able to clearly identify the cause and that’s probably why the battery leads had been removed as mentioned in my note to Norm.
I’m not superstitious and while I learned later the same thing had happened once before, you can’t help thinking that there must have been some free spirit lurking about that stormy night and was about to take the “old girl” for a cruise in the gloom! “Stranger things have happened at sea.”
Thank you Norm for holding on to a note many (including myself) would have discarded long ago. As a friend commented recently when talking about recording family history, “even the milking cow’s name is important”.
Here’s the note
“Now a few directions in case you should be asked to take out the Sounds Ranger.
Batteries have been disconnected – under seat on starboard side, crescent spanner in tool box near batteries.
Before starting engine remove bucket from top of funnel – open hatch to engine room, light switch is on a beam just inside the hatch opening, that is if you stand on the engine room floor looking forward, the switch is on your right hand side on the back of the beam that forms the front section of the hatch opening. Move under the exhaust pipe along to the front port side of the motor. If you look around the actual front of the engine you will see a small wheel with finger grips around the outside (about 3” or 4” diam.)
This is the wheel that engages the bilge pump by simply screwing or rotating the wheel clockwise or in towards the engine. It should be in this position now, so to disengage the pump, just screw the wheel very slowly out. Do not on any account force the wheel too far out, or for that matter too hard in, otherwise it will stick hard. The pump has to be primed before it will start, this done on the starboard side of the engine. There is another light there with the switch by the light bulb, you will find an old kettle with water in it. You will see towards the front, a tap with an opening for the water to be poured in on the top. With the engine at low idling speed, turn the wing tap to vertical – pour water in slowly. I hold my thumb near the hole and when the pump looks like starting I block the hole with my thumb then turn the wing tap to horizontal.
To start the engine use the starter button on a beam in front of the light on the Port side of the motor, but you should only have to use this one when the engine is cold. It also pays to use the overload button on the fuel pump (when the machine is cold only) the button is on the front of the fuel pump.”
(Here there was a small diagram that showed the location of the overload button on the fuel pump.)
“Button should be pushed up, at the same time pull back the rack. Push the starter button until the engine starts.
Be sure to turn both lights out, on leaving the engine room.
To stop the motor just pull a string that hangs on a nail beside the top of the steps that lead into the forward cabin. Normal starting can be done by using the starter button by the compass. (This for some reason has given trouble in which case I have used the engine room button.)
Push throttle lever up to 1100RPM after about 20 minutes. I doubt whether it will be necessary for you to use the boat, and if you do, I don’t think the bilge will have to be pumped out. There is a hand pump in the engine room, the valve is on the side is off. If you have to use this rather that the pump on the motor please be sure to turn the wheel mentioned earlier to off position.
Remember that the motor is only 60 HP and will not pull up as quickly as the PR (Pelorus Ranger – Havelock based vessel) in other words take her quietly and don’t get into shallow water or you will get into trouble.
Hope this makes sense?”
“P.S. Key to door lock is under bucket by gas cylinder rear of wheelhouse.”

(All of this made sense but just being up with the detail didn’t necessarily mean I was any less concerned with the implementation! – Norm. My recollection is that SR drew about 6 feet and was 45 feet at the waterline.)

01-06-2024 -INPUT ex LINDSAY WRIGHT

Hello – I delivered Sounds Ranger from Picton to Tauranga many years ago so she could be taken further north to work for a box netting outfit somewhere in Northland.

She was powered by, I thought, a 5L3 Gardner, but my memory is a bit fuzzy these days and it could have been a 6LW. I believed, at the time, that she’d been used to service a Christian camp in Queen Charlotte Sound.

The dockside dawdlers in Picton cautioned me that she had rolled over while servicing the Brothers Island lighthouse while called Enterprise. All her fuel was in a big steel tank on the port side of the engine room, so, with the tank full, she had a residual port list. I took down the hefty wooden derrick and lashed it along the starboard bulwarks and put a 200 litre drum full of water on the starboard side too. That fixed the list.

We had a good run – with her fine forward sections she punched into a sea beautifully. The wheelhouse was spacious and comfy. I’d planned on going into Gisborne for fuel but in the event, when I sounded the tank, she’d hardly used any, so I kept on going.

In Tauranga I checked all the fluid levels in the Gardner and topped them up, closed the seacocks and left a note to that effect on the dashboard so the new owner would know when he picked her up in a couple of days time. And flew home to Picton.

A few days later the broker rang and said the new owner had rung to say that I’d run the engine out of oil. It made a ticking noise when he started it and there was clean oil in the sump.

But he didn’t know Gardners – they often make a ticking noise on starting and the clean oil was what I had added before I left her.

I suggested to the broker that he tell the new owner all this – and that he tell him to take a running leap off the stern….and wondered about such a good boat going to an unappreciative owner.

A few days the broker rang back and said the new wowner had been in touch to apologise. Perhaps she had gone to good people after all.

Such is the boat delivery game…

TE KUIA – Workboat Wednesday

Kerry Lilley Boatbuilders – Panmure
Panmure River
Tauranga – Blue Ocean Charters
Russell – September 2023

TE KUIA – Workboat Wednesday

Retired boatbuilder Kerry Lilley sent in the photos above of the 52’ workboat – TE KAUIA, which he built in 1978 in Panmure. Kerry built TE KUIA for Harbour Transport, Tauranga which at the time was part New Zealand Forest Products. Her role involved ferrying workers to and from Matakana Island, towing log barges, and other duties and the occasional fishing charter.

TE KUIA was later sold to Hugh Ensor in 1989, who then operated her as a charter fishing boat based at Tauranga. Later Jack Elliot converted TE KUIA to a passenger ferry. At the time the cabin roof was extended.The vessel is powered by a GM 6/71 Detroit diesel engine.

In 2023, the Bay of Islands ferry – WAITERE was involved in collision off Russell and.suffered major damage, and was a write off. TE KUIA was purchased as a replacement in June, 2023 for the Pania > Russell run.

IONA II – Gets A Birthday

IONA II – Gets A Birthday

Back. In October 2022 we reported that the Bruce Askew designed 36’ launch – IONA II had been sold and relocated from Nelson to the Milford Marina in Auckland. INOA II was built in 1994 so slips comfortably into the ‘spirit of tradition’ category of classic wooden vessels. At the time the story she was hauled out at the Slipway Milford for some maintenance – link to that story here –  https://waitematawoodys.com/2022/10/04/iona-ii/

Fast forward to yesterday and IONA II is back at the yard booked in for a serious dose of TLC. Total refresh of everything other than the engine , a 60hp Nissan TD23.
Should be a great project to follow.

UPDATE 09-08-2024 – Lots of activity at the yard, loving the custom bow / anchor sprit

UPDATE 29-08-2024 – new cabin sole undrway

11-09-2024 UPDATE – New windows going in, liking the green tint ✔️

01-10-2024 UPDATE – Get close to re-launching.  First coat on the topsides and interior waiting for the varnish brush. The replacement duckboard brackets are a big improvement from what was there 🙂

04-10-2024 UPDATE – 2nd coat of paint on and some very impressive engineering work on the electric motor installation from Cam Malcolm at the Slipway Milford.

09-10-2024 UPDATE – getting closer, the shiny stuff is going on 🙂

SILVER SPRAY – A Peek Down Below

SILVER SPRAY – A Peek Down Below

Back in early January 2024 we ran a story on the ex workboat > 50’ motorsailer – SILVER SPRAY, at the time we only had a few photos and we were fishing for more details on her past life. Thanks primarily to Paul Drake we uncovered a lot of intel on her. Link here to that story, make sure you read the comments section  https://waitematawoodys.com/2024/01/04/the-motor-sailer-silver-spray/

The readers digest version is that she was built c.1943 by Jack Guard , Wellington, for a Wilfred McManaway and operated as a fishing boat in the Cook Strait, later sold in the 1960’s.

Sank (struck rocks) in Marlborough Sounds (date unknown but in the last 15 yrs). Salvaged and converted to pleasure use at Mana Marina.

Currently powered by a 180hp GM 6/71 Diesel engine that gives her a cruising speed of 8 knots.

In recent years SILVER SPRAY has resided in and around several Auckland marinas.

Today thanks to Ian McDonald we get to have a gander down below.

INPUT ex RON ROLSTON – My wife is the grand daughter of Wilfred McManaway the original owner. The image below was taken from a framed photo belonging to a relative.

MULLET BOAT ON THE WAITEMATA – SPINDRIFT

MULLET BOAT ON THE WAITEMATA – SPINDRIFT
Recently I discovered (thanks to Lew Redwood) a reference source that wasn’t on my radar – the Auckland Research Centre, which appears to be part of the Auckland Libraries offering. Most of the content will put you to sleep but an article this week on MULLET boats I think is worthy of reproducing. Reproduced below.
The photo above shows an open cockpit mullet boat, commercial fishing boat # AK89, off North Head, Auckland. Can we match a name to the commercial number?The image comes to us via Auckland Libraries Heritage collection 37-173 and may possibly have been taken by Henry Winkelmann.

It started off as a fishing boat for the working class man that became a cult classic – the mullet boat (aka the mullety). The mullet boat was developed in the 1860s for fishermen unused to the estuaries and tides of the Manukau and the Waitematā Harbours, to get their haul of fresh mullet, snapper or tarakihi back to Queens Wharf or Devonport as soon as possible. Included was a covered but cramped foredeck if the fishermen needed to spend a night out on the water. 

By the early 1900s, the days of fishing for mullet on sailboat were coming to an end as steam powered boats took over, but sailing the mulleties as a pastime was booming. They competed for the Lipton Cup which was donated to the Ponsonby Cruising Club by Sir Thomas Lipton, who had raced in the America’s Cup five times but never won. In fact, the trophy itself was made by the same silversmith who made the America’s Cup, is New Zealand’s oldest yachting trophy, and is still raced today.  

HAROLD KIDD INPUT – This is the 26ft mullet boat SPINDRIFT owned by H. Parker of Devonport in 1908. She was built at Devonport in 1904 by R.O. Farquhar. Later went north (Whangaruru, Whisk Martinengo thought) and wrecked.

The Best Sub 35’ Owen Woolley – AWARIKI – Now Offered 4sale At Reduced Price One of the best presented woodys 4sale with the Wooden Boat Bureau is the 32’ Owen Woolley built launch – AWARIKI Link below to more details and photos/

WBB has been advised that her owner wants her sold asap and has agreed to a significant price reduction – NOW $48,000 ono

DETAILS:  https://waitematawoodys.com/2023/11/06/awariki-on-the-market/

CONTACT: waitematawoodys@gmail.com

Woodys Postcard From London

Woodys Postcard From London

Olaf Wiig Has owned several woody in NZ, all of which have been enhanced  by Olaf’s talents as a gifted boatbuilder / wooden craftsman. For a period he was also a trustee at the NZ Traditional Boatbuilding School.These Olaf and family resided in the UK but summer in NZ on board their 45’ launch – NGARO , built in 1953 by Lidgards, photo below. During the week Olaf dropped me a note on his recent boating adventures – I’ll let Olaf tell the story. Have to love the flying of the WW burgee 🙂

“For many years we had a beautiful river cruiser in London. She was all varnished mahogany from the waterline up.  When we were thinking of returning to NZ full time she had to be sold as I wouldn’t be here to look after her. She had a mooring in West London which is a really special place but only fits a boat which is narrow boat shaped so a steel narrow boat has lived on this mooring ever since. This year I decided we would take the narrow boat closer to our home in Henley-on-Thames for the summer. Now there are two ways to do that. Come out of her berth in Notting Hill and turn right. This will take you west on the Grand Union Canal (Paddington branch) through West London and eventually down to the Thames at Brentford.  Or you can turn left… this takes you east through Paddington, Little Venice, Regent’s Park, Camden Town and East London, eventually all the way down to Limehouse basin next to the Thames. You can then lock out onto the tidal Thames just below Tower Bridge, ride the flood tide all the way up the river to Teddington where you lock up onto the non tidal Thames. 

I took the second option.  Now the Thames is a very busy commercial port and has a wild reputation for big waves crazy tides and very fast ferries. Narrow boats are slow bathtubs! It wasn’t without a degree of trepidation that we locked out of the huge lock at Limehouse.  We were really lucky, it was the perfect day still and calm and being early on a Saturday the clipper ferries hadn’t started for the day.  What a ride. Under tower bridge past HMS Belfast, London Bridge. HMS Wellington (built for the New Zealand station and based in Auckland to patrol the Pacific Islands, arrived on station in 1934, and recalled for war service in 1939, went on to be a Dunkirk ship in operation Dynamo) the Houses of Parliament…. We arrived at the half tide barrier in Richmond just in time to see it open and Teddington lock right on high water.  From there the Thames passes Hampton Court Palace, Eton, Windsor royal estate and castle and then slowly out into the Buckinghamshire countryside,  the boat is now on her summer mooring at Temple Island,  the start point of the Henley Royal Regatta (rowing). 

Now just to bring this back to woodys.. The last photo above shows one of my favourite London based woodys Wairakei 2 (always thought there must be an NZ connection) another Dunkirk little ship. Her history can be seen herehttps://www.adls.org.uk/wairakei-ii  “

MISS RAETIHI – A Peek Down Below

MISS RAETIHI – A Peek Down Below

Todays woody the 44’ ex charter boat was built in 1955 by Sandy Brunsel in Havelock. Construction is carvel planked Kaihikatea.

Forward motion is via a 471 Detroit Diesel engine that gives her a cruising speed of 8.5 knots.

As to be expected with an ex charter vessel she is very well fitted out. Home is Picton, Marlborough. 

(Thanks to Ian McDonald for the heads up on Miss Raetihi

CYGNET – Restoration

CYGNET – Restoration

 The 35’ launch – CYGNET was built in Auckland in 1913, builder unknown,  and started life as the cream boat on the Mokau River.  A 2016 WW story (link below) advised that she was restored in 1998 and operated on the Mokau as a passenger vessel. 

In a story this week on ’The Kawhia Connection’ fb, Andrew Shaw commented that CYGNET was owned by a John Ruby between mid 1950’s and 1994, based in Kawhia. Also operated for a time by Grant and Pauline Taylor.

Andrew Shaw advised that they had nearly finished a 3 year restoration of CYGNET and a launch date is eminent  (Thanks to Lew Redwood for the heads up)

WW story Oct 2016https://waitematawoodys.com/2016/10/22/23124/

ALICE – Workboat Wednesday

ALICE – Workboat Wednesday

The above photo of the workboat – ALICE popped up on a Ray Morey fb post on the ’Tugs & Workboats of NZ’ site. At the time Ray commented that the photo showed ALICE on the Onehunga Harbour, and shows how she looked when she arrived at Tuakau. She was powered by a 3 cyl, 2 stroke Gardner semi diesel engine. Ray also commented that her previous owner was George Higham.

Can we learn more about this very smart looking craft

DOROTHY – Collings & Bell

DOROTHY (Collings & Bell)

Back in July 2015 we shared a photo of the 1911 Collings & Bell built 35’ launch.  – DOROTHY, in the photo ex Barry Davis,  she was under power and looked very impressive. Note: the photo had been retouched many years ago. 

At the time of the 2015 story Harold Kidd contributed a wealth of intel on DOROTHY and her original owner – W.J. Quelch + her builders, Collings &Bell. Clink below to the story 

WW July 2015 story. https://waitematawoodys.com/2015/07/01/dorothy-2/

Through the powers of the WW archives, Lynley Stone discovered the 2015 story and reached out to share todays photo of DOROTHY and to advise of her grandfather – Lindsay Burrell Stone connection to the launch – I’ll let Lynley tell the story :

“ The above photo of the Dorothy – I think it was probably taken summer 1915-16. It is from my grandfather’s photo album. Either he took it, or it was a gift from the Frys. 

I have evidence that Roland Fry owned the Dorothy at least as early as September 1914. 

My grandfather was Lindsay Burrell Stone. His father Arthur was first cousin to Roland Fry.  Lindsay joined up when war was declared and sailed from Auckland with the Main Body of troops, leaving in September 1914.  

In a letter he posted from Colombo, en route to Egypt in 1914, he asked after The Dorothy and sent his best wishes to Roland. This indicates that he had developed some sort of relationship with the launch before he left.” (Photo ex Lindsay Burrell Stone album)