SHANGO – A Peek Down Below 

SHANGO – A Peek Down Below 

Back in mid January in one of the few good boating days we had I spotted the 40’ Atkinson designed/built (1970) launch – Shango anchored at Waiheke Island – link below to photos and details.

Now thanks to an appearance on tme (thanks Ian McDonald) we get to have a peek down below.  A Ford 200hp 2728T engine gives Shango a comfortable cruising speed of 9 knots. Reviewing the photos she appears to be a very well presented woody. 

She ‘lost’ her NASA space centre control tower (refer below older photo) as part of a 2021/22 refit – we like that 😉

Mahana

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MAHANA

Mahana being built in c.1975 by Atkinson falls into the ‘Spirit of Tradition’ category. She is a biggish girl – 46’ LOA & is pushed along by a 315hp Yanmar.

Ian McDonald commented that he was on board Mahana up Kawau Island some years ago. She was then powered by a big old 6 cyl Foden and was owned at the time by two brothers connected with Rinnai NZ. She is strip planked. Ian next saw her in Picton marina about 2008.

Home these days is the Marlborough Sounds & she is for sale on trademe.

Do we know any more about her past life?

16-01-2023 Update – new photos ex tme listing

 

 

 

 

Voyageur – A Very Big Woody

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Voyageur – A Very Big Woody

Voyageur was built in 1953 to a Chris Craft design, she measures 60′ with a beam of 14’5″ & draft of 5’6″ – so is a rather large old girl.
She is D/D kauri that has been glassed over, with a teak interior. A recent refurbishment included new Volvo engines. For sale at $750K, a lot of money for a 60′ woody but its a lot of boat & being set up for game fishing & in MOSS survey, I assume its a business venture as well.

Any one able to advise the builder?
Thanks to Ian McDonald for the trademe heads up.

UPDATE

Ken Ricketts has advised she was built in 1958 by T K Atkinson at Browns Bay, at 40 feet, for Takapuna Ford dealer Jack Lewis, (Lewis Motors), who extended her in 1965 to 48 feet, the work once again being done by T K Atkinson. —
Lewis took & a friend & me to Browns Bay one day, to see the extension in progress. He was considering a 3rd centre engine for her at that time.
She has obviously been extended again.
What a shame all her lovely exterior varnish has gone — it was such a special part of her beauty & character.
View photos from her early days as a 40 footer here https://waitematawoodys.com/2015/03/18/voyaguer/

Shalom

SHALOM B.O.I. CHRISTMAS 2014

SHALOM
photos ex Barbara Cooke & Ken Ricketts. KR-details edited by Alan H

During the recent CYA meet-up at the Salthouse Boat Yard at Greenhite, we got to see Greg Salthouse’s own launch ‘Shalom’ up close. She was built in 1973 in Browns Bay by local boat builder T K Atkinson as his own personal boat. When launched she was approx.  42′ but while in the ownership of her 2nd owner, Howard Collier, she had an extra 6′ added on by a now non-existent company, in Whangarei.
She is powered by 2 x 350 hp Yanmar diesels & has a top speed  of around 25 knots & cruises comfortably at 17/18 knots. A wee bit faster than his father-in-laws magnificent classic – Trinidad.

Greg & Delayne Salthouse have owned Shalom for 3 years & commented that although T K Atkinson built her for himself, she was owned by Collier most of her life e.g. 25>30 years. Collier kept her at Whangarei during this period. Greg believes she was built to a design ex the American designer, Ray Hunt.

A while ago I (Alan H) was aboard & Greg has sprinkled some of the Salthouse yard magic on her, mainly modernizing the interior to better suit his young family. For 48′ she  is a very big boat. When I was aboard I was in company of Colin Pawson, one of the marine trades most fastidious technicians & he was impressed enough by the T K Atkinson’s workmanship that he was heard to mutter ‘I’d own her’, enough said 😉
While she is sporting a penthouse, it is very ‘light’ in appearance & almost gets a tick 😉

Voyageur


VOYAGEUR
photos & details ex Sea Spray (c1958 & April 1965) & Ken Ricketts ex Brian Worthington

Voyageur was built for Jack Lewis, the M.D. of Lewis Motors Ltd., the North Shore Ford franchise holders back in the 50s (later to become Lyon Motors).

She was originally 40′ by 14′ 2″ beam & 3′ 4″ draft, with a high performance hard chine hull, designed & built By T.K. Atkinson at Browns Bay & launched in either late 1958 or early 1959.

When launched she had 2 x 86 HP 6 Cyl naturally aspirated Ford diesels for which Jack L., was North Shore agent, driving through 2 to 1 reduction Vee drives, with the engines under the cockpit/sundeck floor.

Ken was aboard Voyageur (see below) when she was only 3 weeks old, in Little Muddy Bay Waiheke & commented that her finish had “Rolls Royce” perfection, in every aspect, with all the very latest mod. cons., of that era. She was in her original format a  huge volume boat, & as it stated in Sea Spray, at the time, more like a flat than a boat, from a space perspective, with a 12′ by 13′ 6″ main cabin & the  cockpit being 11′ by 6′.  She was in many ways, ahead of her time. Absolutely everyone knew about her, even before she hit the water. Even today, she appears as a modern, high performance boat.

With her comparatively very small 172horse power, she cruised comfortably at 10 & ½ knots, at 2000 rpm, with a top speed of 12 ½ knots, through 23 x 21 props., at just 1 & ¼ gallons of fuel per hour each engine, cruising.

Jack L. decided c 1964 to extend her rear end by 8 feet, once again Atkinson was commissioned to do this. Ken recalls vividly the day in early 1965  that he & his lifelong friend Lloyd Burnand,  went to see Jack, to buy the 6 cyl Ford, for the boat Lloyd was building (Pearl Diver) & Jack insisted on taking them in his brand new red & cream Mk II Ford Zodiac, out to Browns Bay to see the work in progress on Voyageur. Ken recalls the work was being done to the very highest standards, in every respect. He told us, it was his intention to re-engine her, with 3 new larger engines, fitting a additional one in the middle. Can anyone confirm this happened?

Below is Kens story of how he came to board Voyageur post an oops moment

“About 40 or so of us boaties, were sitting in our boats about 6 pm, preparing dinner, on a lovely flat calm Saturday evening, in Little Muddy Bay, Waiheke Island, minding our own business, when suddenly without warning, 2 launches appeared from around the point on the eastern end of the bay, travelling side by side at high speed, less than 1 km off the point. – To say we were all amazed would have been an understatement.
 
One was Albie Lemmon, in his fairly knew lovely c40 foot sedan topper, powered by 2 x Kermath vee driven petrol engines (the name of which escapes me), which later was sadly destroyed by fire, & yes you’ve guessed it, the other was the brand new VOYAGEUR, which most of us had never seen before. About 500 to 600 metres past the bay, they slowed down, from what had obviously been a little probably impromptu race between them, – they knew each other well, & then VOYAGEUR came in to the far western end of the bay, at the slowest of slow idles, & anchored all by themselves, in complete isolation.
 
Notwithstanding the huge wash that had destroyed the peace of the bay for that inevitable minute or so, & probably upset a few pots on stoves as well, my fiancé & I, leapt in to our dinghy, fired up the trusty Seagull,  & zipped over to have a look at “God’s latest creation,” & as we circled her from a discrete distance of about 50 m., Jack beckoned us with enthusiasm, to come closer. When we reached the stern he could hardly wait to invite us aboard, which would have been partly because he was naturally very proud of his new toy, but more especially it seemed, it was to apologise profusely to us as individuals for what he had just done. – He said, as we had thought, that as they sped past, he had not given a seconds thought to their wash & inevitable result. He said he was deeply embarrassed, ashamed, & confused about what to do next. He asked me if I thought he should go to all the individual boats in the bay to apologise, but I said, as we all knew this was his first foray into the world of boating, & he had just made one of the mistakes, we all make, in our early learning days, ( & which many of us can continue to do occasionally, right through our boating lives), & I told him I felt that everyone would forgive him & by the next morning, it would all be forgotten, & indeed this proved to be the case. – I never heard it mentioned by anybody ever.”